Physics, asked by rahulteacher5026, 1 year ago

How sensitively can we detect a moon-sized mass of dark matter?

Answers

Answered by swagg0
0
HEY MATE ⭐⭐⭐
HERE'S THE ANSWER ✌
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Scientists predict it makes up 26.8% of the universe, which is pretty significant when you consider that everything else we can observe—from hydrogen atoms to black holes—makes up only 5%. (The other 69% is something scientists call dark energy. Don't worry about it.)

There's just one problem. It doesn't interact with electromagnetism—the force between positively and negatively charged particles. It's responsible for practically everything we can observe in day-to-day life—with the exception of gravity.

Electromagnetic forces present between atoms and molecules in the ground is the reason Earth's gravity doesn't keep pulling us all the way down to its (molten hot) core. The light being emitted from your computer, allowing you to read this story, is generated by interactions of electrically charged particles in your monitor, otherwise known as electricity.

Ordinary matter looks like ordinary matter because of the electromagnetic forces between atoms and molecules. But dark matter doesn't interact with electromagnetism.

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Answered by GhaintMunda45
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Hey !

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The dark matter is to be blamed for the consequences of the experiment.

We have to avoid the dark matter to rech the result of the experiment.

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Thanks !

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