The simplicity of protons, neutrons, and electrons was gone, replaced by chaos. Physicists worried that they had lost the thread — that nature was far more complicated than they had hoped. But out of ...
The universe's matter-antimatter asymmetry, where matter significantly outweighs antimatter despite their theoretically equal creation at the Big Bang, remains a major unsolved problem in physics.
Everything we see around us, from the ground beneath our feet to the most remote galaxies, is made of matter. For scientists, that has long posed a problem: According to physicists’ best current ...
UC Santa Cruz physicist Stefano Profumo has put forward two imaginative but scientifically grounded theories that may help solve one of the biggest mysteries in physics: the origin of dark matter. In ...
1 East Chapel Hill High School, Chapel Hill, NC, USA. 2 School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China. The geometric deformation wave propagates ...
Physicists can map its gravity, tally its cosmic abundance, and observe its fingerprints in the microwave glow of the Big Bang. Yet no one has ever detected a single particle of dark matter in the ...
New dark matter model includes lightweight particles with weak interactio Massive vector boson enables connection between dark and known matter Thermal freeze-out explains how dark matter’s cosmic ...
This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Space.com's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights. Why didn’t the universe annihilate itself moments ...
An artistic illustration of the mechanism proposed by Professor Stefano Profumo where quantum effects near the rapidly expanding cosmic horizon after the Big Bang gravitationally generate dark matter ...
Scientists are on the trail of a mysterious five-particle structure that could challenge one of the biggest theories in physics: string theory. This rare particle—never seen before and predicted not ...
A new theory by University of Alaska Fairbanks scientist Gunther Kletetschka argues that time comes in three dimensions rather than just the single one we experience as continual forward progression, ...