The great accomplishment of late-twentieth-century cosmology was putting together a complete inventory of the universe. We can tell a story that fits all the known data, in which ordinary matter (every particle ever detected in any experiment) constitutes only about 5% of the energy of the universe, with 25% being dark matter and 70% being dark energy. The challenge for early-twenty-first-century cosmology will actually be to understand the nature of these mysterious dark components. A beautiful new result illuminating (if you will) the dark matter in galaxy cluster 1E 0657-56 is an important step in this direction. (Here's the press release, and an article in the Chandra Chronicles.) A prerequisite to understanding the dark sector is to make sure we are on the right track. Can we be sure that we haven't been fooled into believing in dark matter and dark energy? After all, we only infer their existence from ...
Dark Matter Exists
Explore the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy and how modified gravity might hold the answers to our cosmic questions.
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