New Strategies

New Strategies

Published on Dec 2
2分钟
StarDate
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<p>Scientists have been searching for dark matter for decades. They haven&#8217;t found it &#8211; every experiment they&#8217;ve devised has come up empty. But they haven&#8217;t given up. Among other ideas, they&#8217;re thinking about ways to use moons, planets, and stars as detectors.</p> <p>Dark matter appears to make up about 85 percent of all the matter in the universe. We know it&#8217;s there because its gravity pulls on the visible stars and galaxies around it.</p> <p>Dark matter may consist of a type of particle that almost never interacts with normal matter. But it should interact just enough to reveal its nature.</p> <p>Experiments here on Earth haven&#8217;t seen any such interactions. So some scientists recommend using astronomical objects instead of lab experiments.</p> <p>Blobs of dark matter might enfold a binary star system. The dark matter&#8217;s gravity could pull the two stars away from each other. And dark matter might clump together to make a special kind of st...
New Strategies - StarDate - 播刻岛