Scientists just found the hidden cosmic fingerprints of dark matter
A Rutgers-led team of scientists, together with collaborators, has traced the invisible dark matter scaffolding of the universe by studying more than 100,000 Lyman-alpha emitting galaxies. By examining how these galaxies clustered across three distinct eras shortly after the Big Bang, the researchers were able to map concentrations of dark matter. These cosmic “fingerprints” provide crucial evidence of how galaxies grow and evolve, offering new insights into the expansion and formation of the universe.
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