Half the universe’s ordinary matter was missing — and may have been found0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 29, 2020
The long-sought matter appears to have been hiding in the gaps between galaxies

The long-sought matter appears to have been hiding in the gaps between galaxies

This galaxy would have once looked a lot like the early Milky Way.

Chimpanzee lip smacks follow the rhythm of human speech, a study has found.

New simulations from Imperial College London have revealed the asteroid that doomed the dinosaurs struck Earth at the ‘deadliest possible’ angle.

A black hole burp filled the Milky Way’s center with mysterious invisible structures, a new study suggests.

Blasts differ from ‘ordinary’ supernovae, gamma-ray bursts

Dormant “zombie fires” scattered across the Arctic region — remnants of record blazes last year — may be coming to life after an unusually warm and dry spring, scientists warned Wednesday.

Roughly half of the “normal” matter in the universe—the stuff that makes up stars, planets, and even us—exists as mere wisps of material floating in intergalactic space, according to cosmologists. But astronomers had no good way to confirm that, until now.

It will be the first time Americans will launch from American soil since 2011.

If true, this would be only the second time such a neutrino has been traced back to its source



