Physics, asked by akash222213, 1 year ago

what is black matter?​

Answers

Answered by pprakul
1

What Is Dark Matter?

By fitting a theoretical model of the composition of the universe to the combined set of cosmological observations, scientists have come up with the composition that we described above, ~68% dark energy, ~27% dark matter, ~5% normal matter. What is dark matter?

We are much more certain what dark matter is not than we are what it is. First, it is dark, meaning that it is not in the form of stars and planets that we see. Observations show that there is far too little visible matter in the universe to make up the 27% required by the observations. Second, it is not in the form of dark clouds of normal matter, matter made up of particles called baryons. We know this because we would be able to detect baryonic clouds by their absorption of radiation passing through them. Third, dark matter is not antimatter, because we do not see the unique gamma rays that are produced when antimatter annihilates with matter. Finally, we can rule out large galaxy-sized black holes on the basis of how many gravitational lenses we see. High concentrations of matter bend light passing near them from objects further away, but we do not see enough lensing events to suggest that such objects to make up the required 25% dark matter contribution.


pprakul: thanks
Answered by ayushman43
1
Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter that is thought to account for approximately 85% of matter in the universe and about a quarter of its total energy density.The majority of dark matter is thought to be non-baryonic in nature,possibly being composed of some as-yet undiscovered subatomic particles. Hope It's Help You

ayushman43: Please mark me as brainleast
Similar questions