Is dark matter mostly 'dark atoms'?
By: Edwin Cartlidge is a science journalist based in Rome
Sep 21, 2009 - www.PhysicsWorld.com
Physicists currently believe that most of the dark matter in the universe is made up of individual particles, and the challenge is to work out what kind of particles these are. New research, however, overturns this assumption and says that observational and experimental data are better explained if dark matter exists as composite particles – atoms of dark protons and dark electrons that are acted on by the dark-matter equivalent of the electromagnetic force.
Dark matter is thought to make up more than 80% of the matter in the universe. As its name suggests, dark matter does not reveal itself by emitting light because it does not interact via electromagnetism. Its existence is instead inferred through its gravitational effects on normal matter.
>>> click for full article
Sep 21, 2009 - www.PhysicsWorld.com
Physicists currently believe that most of the dark matter in the universe is made up of individual particles, and the challenge is to work out what kind of particles these are. New research, however, overturns this assumption and says that observational and experimental data are better explained if dark matter exists as composite particles – atoms of dark protons and dark electrons that are acted on by the dark-matter equivalent of the electromagnetic force.
Dark matter is thought to make up more than 80% of the matter in the universe. As its name suggests, dark matter does not reveal itself by emitting light because it does not interact via electromagnetism. Its existence is instead inferred through its gravitational effects on normal matter.
>>> click for full article






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