Dark matter are exotic and poorly understood forms of mass in the universe, and normal matter are basically common phases of matter found on Earth, such as solids, liquids and gas.
Negative space is dark energy and dark matter.
There is at least 5 times as much dark matter than normal matter. "Normal" matter in this case includes all matter of known composition, including stars, interestellar gas and dust, and even black holes.There is at least 5 times as much dark matter than normal matter. "Normal" matter in this case includes all matter of known composition, including stars, interestellar gas and dust, and even black holes.There is at least 5 times as much dark matter than normal matter. "Normal" matter in this case includes all matter of known composition, including stars, interestellar gas and dust, and even black holes.There is at least 5 times as much dark matter than normal matter. "Normal" matter in this case includes all matter of known composition, including stars, interestellar gas and dust, and even black holes.
Dark Matter
No, when the big bang happend dark matter and dark energy came. Dark matter expands space even as we speak.
Matter occupies space. Also dark matter does too.
The Universe contains matter, energy, dark matter, dark energy, empty space - and of course, lots of structures made up of those.The Universe contains matter, energy, dark matter, dark energy, empty space - and of course, lots of structures made up of those.The Universe contains matter, energy, dark matter, dark energy, empty space - and of course, lots of structures made up of those.The Universe contains matter, energy, dark matter, dark energy, empty space - and of course, lots of structures made up of those.
That is because the dark matter attracts normal matter through its gravitation.
All over the dark expanse of space.
A collision.
Since dark matter has mass, it is able to warp time and space, which also makes it able to bend light. The effect of dark matter on space-time (and, therefore, light) is the same as that of regular matter.
No.We know very little about dark matter; there are some ideas, but, as yet, nobody knows for sure what it is. What we doknow about dark matter, however, is that it interacts very weakly with other matter. Dark matter and "normal" matter are intermixed throughout space; if there were some catastrophic annihilation interaction between the two, we'd see the electromagnetic signature of that in observations of galaxies and galaxy clusters.
About 95.7% of the universe is dark matter, and the remaining percent (4.3%) is made of normal matter, plants, gases and such.