Scientists shed light on mystery of dark matter0
- From Around the Web, Science & Technology
- March 4, 2020
Scientists have identified a sub-atomic particle that could have formed the “dark matter” in the Universe during the Big Bang.
Scientists have identified a sub-atomic particle that could have formed the “dark matter” in the Universe during the Big Bang.
It’s hard living in a relativistic Universe, where even the nearest stars are so far away and the speed of light is absolute. It is little wonder then why science fiction franchises routinely employ FTL (Faster-than-Light) as a plot device.
You might be made up of nothingness, but you still matter, according to science.
Hypergiant Industries has clients like NASA, Shell, and Booz Allen. It says it can use machine learning from satellite imagery to detect anomalies.
They are military aircraft.
This is a huge step in quantum physics.
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Scientists have announced a breakthrough that could be key to the creation of a powerful new kind of particle collider.
These supremely stable particles could explain dark matter.
Physicists have now cooled beams of the subatomic particles