Dark Matter Might Live In A Dense Haze Around Stellar Corpses
Axions—a popular dark matter candidate—may be floating around dense stellar remnants in a haze, and even be detectable to some telescopes. They base their work on dense stellar corpses called pulsars. As the pulsars rotate, they emit radio pulses so regular they rival atomic clocks on earth. That's the aspect of dark matter that makes it effectively invisible. Noordhuis and colleagues have now turned their attention to axions that would have been left behind after this daring escape,.
We anticipate that analyzing observational. It's being described as the most detailed ever map of the influence of dark matter through cosmic history. A telescope in chile has traced the distribution of this mysterious stuff. Overturning decades of confusion about a potential “conspiracy” between dark matter and stellar matter, researchers are now rethinking the fundamental assumptions. #shortsthe extreme qualities of neutron stars could mean these dead stellar remnants gather dense clouds of hypothetical particles called axions around the.
simulation halos massive inset