Is
our universe haunted? It might look that way on this dark
matter map. The
gravity of unseen dark
matter is the
leading explanation for why galaxies
rotate so fast, why galaxies
orbit clusters so fast,
why gravitational
lenses so strongly deflect light, and why visible
matter is distributed
as it is both in
the local universe and on
the cosmic microwave
background. The featured
image from the American
Museum of Natural History‘s Hayden
Planetarium previous
Space Show Dark
Universe highlights
one example of how pervasive dark matter might haunt our universe. In this
frame from a detailed
computer simulation, complex
filaments of dark matter, shown in black, are strewn about
the universe like spider
webs, while the
relatively rare clumps of familiar baryonic matter are colored orange. These
simulations are good
statistical matches to astronomical observations. In what is perhaps a scarier
turn of events, dark
matter — although
quite strange and in an unknown
form — is no
longer thought to be the strangest source of gravity
in the universe. That honor now
falls to dark
energy, a more uniform
source of repulsive
gravity that seems
to now dominate the expansion of the entire universe.
Source: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html
Illustration Credit & Copyright: Tom Abel & Ralf Kaehler (KIPAC, SLAC), AMNH
Source: https://myfusimotors.com/2020/10/25/dark-matter-in-a-simulated-universe/
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