Saturday, February 18, 2012

Empirical tests show universe is filled with dark matter

By Donald Sensing



The two images illustrate the effect of gravitational lensing. A massive galaxy at the center of the right panel causes the images of the background galaxies (white spots) to be enlarged and brightened.(Image credit: Joerg Colberg, Ryan Scranton, Robert Lupton, SDSS

Physorg.com: Missing dark matter located: Intergalactic space is filled with dark matter
Researchers at the University of Tokyo’s Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe (IPMU) and Nagoya University used large-scale computer simulations and recent observational data of gravitational lensing to reveal how dark matter is distributed around galaxies.

The new research concludes that galaxies have no definite “edges.” Instead galaxies have long outskirts of dark matter that extend to nearby galaxies and the intergalactic space is not empty but filled with dark matter.
The theory of dark matter was developed since 1932 to account for the fact the observable matter in the universe does not account, by far, of the calculations of massive effects in the universe.

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