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- “The models were right”: astronomers find ‘missing’ matter
Astronomers have discovered a huge filament of hot gas bridging four galaxy clusters At 10 times as massive as our galaxy, the thread could contain some of the Universe’s ‘missing’ matter, addressing a decades-long mystery
- Astronomers have found the universes missing matter at last . . .
'The models were right!' Astronomers locate universe's 'missing' matter in the largest cosmic structures; Astronomers discover dark matter 'bridge' linking colliding galaxies: 'This is the missing
- The models were right! Astronomers locate universes . . .
Using the XMM-Newton telescope, astronomers have discovered a vast 23 million light-year-wide tendril connecting galactic clusters and containing much of the universe's missing matter
- Astronomers Finally Find the Universe’s Missing Matter with . . .
Cosmological models had predicted its presence for years But the problem was visibility The universe’s missing matter didn’t shine, didn’t glow in X-rays or twinkle in ultraviolet It drifted through space in hot, low-density filaments, slipping silently between galaxies
- Astronomers just found the universes missing matter: Here . . .
Powerful bursts of radio waves emanating from 69 locations in the cosmos have helped researchers at long last find the "missing" matter The results revealed that about 75% of the universe's
- The models were right: Astronomers find missing matter . . .
Over one-third of the 'normal' matter in the local universe—the visible stuff making up stars, planets, galaxies, life—is missing It hasn't yet been seen, but it's needed to make our models of
- “The models were right”: astronomers find ‘missing’ matter
“More fundamentally, it reinforces our standard model of the cosmos and validates decades of simulations: it seems that the ‘missing’ matter may truly be lurking in hard-to-see threads woven across the universe ” Piecing together an accurate picture of the cosmic web is the domain of ESA’s Euclid mission
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