Article 6DGDA Scientists Propose Webb Telescope Has Detected Stars Powered by Dark Matter

Scientists Propose Webb Telescope Has Detected Stars Powered by Dark Matter

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hubie
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upstart writes:

A team of researchers suggests the space observatory just spotted "dark stars"-theoretical stellar objects powered by dark matter:

Astronomers looking at ancient light seen by the Webb Space Telescope have found three pinpricks that they think could be "dark stars," theoretical objects powered by dark matter.

Dark matter makes up about 27% of the universe; its partner in ambiguity, dark energy, makes up about 68%. You can do the math: we know stunningly little of what makes up the universe and how it behaves. It's in that zone of cosmic uncertainty that Webb's latest targets pop up. The team's research was published last week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[...] The three objects date to when the universe was between 320 million and 400 million years old, making them quite young (in a cosmic sense). And while they could well be galaxies containing millions of stars, the recent research team posits that they are never-before-seen dark stars, which could be millions of times the mass of our Sun and would be powered by the collisions of dark matter particles, rather than nuclear fusion.

Dark matter is not literally dark, at least not necessarily. It is called dark matter because it is nearly impossible for humans to detect. We see dark matter in its gravitational effects; haloes of dark matter glom galaxies together, and astronomers see ancient light more clearly when dark matter bends and focuses the photons transiting its gravitational field.

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