dark matter
Stanford physicist Peter Graham recently received a Breakthrough New Horizons in Physics Prize for his new direction for looking for the most basic laws of nature.
Giant Atoms Could Help Unveil ‘Dark Matter’ and Other Cosmic Secrets
Researchers from the University of Amsterdam's (UvA) GRAPPA Center of Excellence have just published the most precise analysis of the fluctuations in the gamma-ray background to date.
A new highly sensitive detector is being built one kilometer underground in a gold mine to detect the elusive dark matter.
A team led by astronomer Margot Brouwer (Leiden Observatory, The Netherlands) has tested the new theory of theoretical physicist Erik Verlinde (University of Amsterdam) for the first time through the lensing effect of gravity.
New calculations suggest that dark matter is less dense and more smoothly distributed throughout space than previously thought.
In the search for the mysterious dark matter, physicists have used elaborate computer calculations to come up with an outline of the particles of this unknown form of matter.
Next-generation dark matter detector will be at least 100 times more sensitive than its predecessor, launching forward the hunt for the ever-elusive dark matter.
Similar to the Higgs boson, the new Madala boson could help us understand the phenomenon of dark matter.