Dark matter can be detected because it got gravity.
Dark matter is inferred to exist because of the gravitational effects it has on visible matter in the universe. Observations of galaxies rotating faster than expected and the bending of light around massive objects support the presence of dark matter. However, dark matter itself has not been directly observed or detected.
Dark matter can be detected by its gravitational effects on visible matter and light. It does not emit, absorb, or reflect light, making it invisible to telescopes. Scientists use indirect methods like gravitational lensing and measuring the rotational speeds of galaxies to study and detect the presence of dark matter.
Dark matter may be invisible to light, but it can still be detected, through its gravitational interactions. Specifically, it can be detected: * By the fact that galaxies rotate way too fast, for the amount of known matter. * By gravitational lensing.
They're both theoretical constructs and neither has actually been detected, measured, nor "seen".
No, DNA does not contain dark matter that codes for specific structural proteins. DNA is made up of specific sequences of nucleotides that code for proteins through the process of transcription and translation. Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that has not been directly observed or detected in DNA.
Dark matter is inferred to exist because of the gravitational effects it has on visible matter in the universe. Observations of galaxies rotating faster than expected and the bending of light around massive objects support the presence of dark matter. However, dark matter itself has not been directly observed or detected.
Dark matter can be detected by its gravitational effects on visible matter and light. It does not emit, absorb, or reflect light, making it invisible to telescopes. Scientists use indirect methods like gravitational lensing and measuring the rotational speeds of galaxies to study and detect the presence of dark matter.
Dark matter and dark energy have NOT been detected yet, so any ideas about detecting dark energy and dark matter, whether it be directly or indirectly, is speculation for now.
Dark matter may be invisible to light, but it can still be detected, through its gravitational interactions. Specifically, it can be detected: * By the fact that galaxies rotate way too fast, for the amount of known matter. * By gravitational lensing.
They're both theoretical constructs and neither has actually been detected, measured, nor "seen".
That is because the dark matter attracts normal matter through its gravitation.
"Anti-matter" . . . yes, routinely. "Dark matter" . . . no way to know. The reason it's called "dark" is that it can't be seen or detected in any way currently available to us; its existence is a hypothesis that's presently untestable.
No, DNA does not contain dark matter that codes for specific structural proteins. DNA is made up of specific sequences of nucleotides that code for proteins through the process of transcription and translation. Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that has not been directly observed or detected in DNA.
We know "dark matter is present because it affects the world in ways I do not know of.
Yes it is important because on basis of dark matter amount our universe will expand.
Cold dark matter. It can't be seen or detected by its radiation. Some say that ranks it with Bigfoot and the Tooth Fairy!
The shadow particles were dark matter. Dark matter is a hypothetical matter that explains why the universe is the size it is (essentially, the universe isn't expanding as fast as predicted and adding dark matter makes the predictions match reality). Very little is known about dark matter - it's called dark because it can't be seen. Because so little is known about dark matter, we can't actually say they aren't "particles of consciouness", but it is sadly unlikely.