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“The models were right”: astronomers find ‘missing’ matter “More fundamentally, it reinforces our standard model of the cosmos and validates decades of simulations: it seems that the ‘missing’ matter may truly be lurking in hard-to-see threads woven across the Universe ” Piecing together an accurate picture of the cosmic web is the domain of ESA’s Euclid mission
The models were right! Astronomers locate universes . . . The aforementioned models of the cosmos, including the standard model of cosmology, have long posited the idea that the missing baryonic matter of the universe is locked up in vast filaments of
The models were right: Astronomers find missing matter . . . Astronomers have discovered a huge filament of hot gas bridging four galaxy clusters At 10 times as massive as our galaxy, the thread could contain some of the universe's 'missing' matter
‘We Were Right’: Astronomers Find What the Cosmos Was Hiding This finding not only helps account for the universe’s missing baryonic matter, it also supports long-standing models of how the universe formed The Cosmic Web —an enormous network of gas and galaxies—is thought to have acted as a framework for how matter assembled after the Big Bang, guiding the formation of galaxies and clusters along
Astronomers Uncover a Massive Shaft of Missing Matter Another clue about the whereabouts of the missing matter in the Universe has just emerged from amid the largest local cosmic structure X-ray observations have revealed a massive filament of hot gas, measuring some 23 million light-years in length, in the space between four sub-clusters of galaxies in the enormous, 8,000-galaxy strong Shapley
X-Ray Telescopes Reveal 23-Million-Light-Year Filament That . . . Current models of the universe have a major shortcoming: they can’t fully account for all the matter that should exist While dark matter and dark energy—detectable only by their effects—compose most of the cosmos, visible matter accounts for just about 5% Yet even among that 5%, nearly half of the expected matter remains missing
Astronomers Confirm: Models Predicting Missing Matter Were . . . PARIS, France -- In a significant breakthrough, astronomers have confirmed that the models predicting the existence of 'missing matter' in the universe were correct The discovery, announced earlier today, solves a decades-long mystery and provides crucial insights into the cosmic web that connects galaxy clusters