What is the nature of dark matter? A new experiment led by Columbia University physics professors aims to find out.
Because dark matter is completely invisible to light, science had to look for clever new methods to spot it.
A mysterious excess of far-ultraviolet light seen across the Milky Way could come from the annihilation of clumpy dark matter ...
Reactors designed to produce energy from the fusion of atoms could have an unexpected scientific side benefit. An ...
The General AntiParticle Spectrometer experiment is suspended from a football-field-sized balloon about 24 miles above the ...
Fusion reactors might help detect dark matter, suggests a study with contributions from a University of Cincinnati professor.
A research team from the Xinjiang Astronomical Observatory (XAO) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has developed an ...
With contributions from Brown faculty and students, the LUX-ZEPLIN experiment analyzed the largest dataset ever collected by a dark matter detector, and the results provide the strongest constraints ...
Gravitational wave astronomy is starting to do more than confirm Einstein’s equations. It is turning into a precision tool ...
Scientists search for "decaying" dark matter (DDM) because it offers unique signatures like specific X-ray or gamma-ray lines ...
Explore the elusive nature of dark matter, its indirect evidence, and the latest LUX-ZEPLIN detector advancements in the ...
Normal matter – which makes up everything we see and touch – isn’t the only type of matter present in the universe.