Physics, asked by Marsmars, 11 months ago

what does a weakly interacting particle (WIMP) interact with?​


aqua089: It may be true as I am working on the same question about wormholes, black holes, whiteholes(made by me), anti-parlicles,etc.
aqua089: And there are anti-particles for each particle.
aqua089: make an account in OER COMMONS . I have just formed a blog Astronomy Today in which I will put more about it in format. I will need a few days.
aqua089: Hey, I need some latest online competitions list related to astronomy and cosmology.
aqua089: Could u work on it
aqua089: ????
Marsmars: can u make it more clear
aqua089: I need latest online competitions related to astronomy and cosmology, please.
Marsmars: I am not familiar with any online competition
aqua089: k, no problem. I UPDATED about WIMPS in my blog. Search oer commons for Astronomy Today and its there.

Answers

Answered by aqua089
0

Answer:

It's actually dark matter, or more like it's constituent.

Explanation:

Interacts via gravity and any other force (or forces), potentially not part of the standard model itself, which is as weak as or weaker than the weak nuclear force, but also non-vanishing in its strength.


Marsmars: it doesn't show interaction with baryonic matter but is there anything other than force field it interact with
aqua089: Nope
Marsmars: is there a chance that these unknown dark matter particles may be the super symmetrical particles of known fermions and bosons
aqua089: yep, there may be a chance but we still need to find out. I will have the perfect answer ready in 2 days.
Marsmars: okk
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