@cleoabram: This is the most detailed map of dark matter we’ve ever made. It makes up 27% of our universe but we don’t really understand it because it’s INVISIBLE! This shows the previous map we had made with the Hubble telescope in 2007 and the new map, made by Webb. Clearer pictures of this mysterious matter help us understand it! For more optimistic science and tech stories subscribe! #Science #NASA #darkmatter #space #telescope
If universe is infinite, how do we know that this dark matter makes 27% of it?
2026-03-03 19:36:04
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MisterWhisper :
I explain "dark matter" as a misunderstanding of the substrate's rotational inertia. When I observe galaxies spinning faster than their visible mass suggests they should, I don't assume there is an invisible particle "glue" holding them together. Instead, I recognize that the rotational substrate has a background viscosity and inertia that I haven't fully accounted for in standard Newtonian calculations.
In my model, a galaxy is a massive, complex vortex structure. The "extra" velocity I see at the edges of the galaxy is the result of the surrounding substrate being "dragged" along by the galaxy's spin. Because the substrate is continuous, a galaxy doesn't just rotate in a vacuum; it couples with the field around it. This coupling creates a frame-dragging effect that gives the appearance of extra mass, when it is actually just the momentum of the substrate medium itself contributing to the rotational system.
This means "dark matter" isn't a substance at all. It is a geometric bias in my observations. I am measuring the rotational energy of the medium and mislabeling it as a missing physical object. When I calculate the density of the substrate and its inherent rotational inertia, the "missing mass" becomes perfectly explained by the mechanical dynamics of the vortex system.
2026-03-13 14:31:07
8
nasa :
i see something screeeaming
2026-03-06 14:34:29
85
IAmAlex😜 :
Could you do a video about the theory that dark matter is microscopic blackholes?
2026-03-03 16:48:45
0
ferus :
For everyone who’s confused in the comments: Dark Matter exists. We know it exists because our models of physics demand that there’s roughly 27% less *observable* mass than there *must* be. Because we couldn’t see or identify where or what this mass was, it was labeled Dark Matter. Dark Matter is not some sci-fi fanfiction - it’s a placeholder name for something we know exists but don’t understand. The way this mapping works is because Dark Matter - despite being invisible to detection - does still *have mass*, which means it has an observable impact on gravity. By observing the warping that that gravity causes, we can map where the Dark Matter must be - even if we can’t see it or know what it is. Yet.
2026-03-28 02:20:05
2
Cutz_Above_Barber :
How do we know is Dark?
2026-03-04 16:37:13
2
user811430 :
since dark matter make 27% of universe & considering universe constantly expanding,so how can we put 100% to something tht constantly expands?
2026-04-01 15:31:16
0
TommyGK :
i like how much weve evolved in technology so much that we can make space pics so detailed
2026-03-03 16:32:50
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a henta! virus🥀 :
sooo is dark matter like glass? or is it dense air?
2026-04-23 08:50:09
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abdelkrimaswan :
we see dark matter now ?? what really when this happend
2026-03-05 07:12:10
1
brewp49 :
We don’t even understand if it actually exists or if it is the equivalent of a physics Sasquatch or a yeti.
2026-03-03 17:23:35
1
Monii :
First also love the vids
2026-03-03 15:23:26
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jamilitarymaine | twitch :
You make science sound sooo funnn
2026-03-05 19:14:58
3
HENA BELL :
how do we know it had mass?
2026-03-03 16:41:39
6
Lev :
What is this Face?😭
2026-04-21 06:28:03
1
anonymousanonymou0321 :
I feel like your videos have trailor vibes. When r u going to make a longer one??
2026-04-11 07:31:56
1
Javier Rocha :
hmm we should point it to that dark hole in space where there isn't many galaxies to give more details
2026-03-04 05:45:59
3
timothy bender853 :
gravity
2026-03-14 01:03:38
2
J.D :
if dark matter disappear. are all planet or universe fall down here?
2026-03-24 10:04:56
1
Kenny :
what if matter is like one side of a light pole of a magnet and antimatter would be the opposite side of magnetism where it reflects atoms and photons
2026-03-04 05:57:42
0
arofox :
just saying, anything that has gravity pulls on things, even light. galaxies have gravity.
dark matter = gravitational pull that we cant see or calculate
2026-03-03 16:30:01
2
Steward's Enquiry :
"dark matter makes up 27% of the universe"
I thought it was 95%?
2026-03-10 00:18:56
1
Thecuriousone1 :
Maybe dark matter is multidimensional which is invisible to humans unless you’re not observing. It’s late
2026-03-04 08:07:57
1
Choka :
What if dark matter is actually a different system of existence from our known one
2026-03-03 17:21:52
4
baliuxum :
What IF we could use it's mass in the future to push spacecraft?
2026-03-03 16:31:11
0
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