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First and perhaps most perplexingly, researchers remain unsure about what exactly dark matter is. Originally, some scientists conjectured that the missing mass in the universe was made up of small faint stars and black holes, though detailed observations have not turned up nearly enough such objects to account for dark matter's influence.

Astrophysicist Paul Sutter explains what #darkmatter is and how physicists can determine the invisible substance exists.
Transcript
00:00What is dark matter? Dark matter should be called invisible matter. It's matter
00:08that doesn't interact with light or with any other charged particles. It's matter
00:14that has nothing to do with light. That's the point. I'm Paul Sutter and this is
00:20Paul Explains, the show where I, you know, explain. How do we know that dark matter
00:27exists? Well, we don't see it in Earth or the solar system. You have to look at big
00:35scales before dark matter really starts to reveal itself. And we saw it first in
00:41the 1930s with the motions of galaxies inside of galaxy clusters. The galaxies
00:47were just moving way too fast. The galaxy cluster should have ripped itself apart
00:52billions of years ago, but there was still existing. So something had to
00:57be gluing all those galaxies. Even our own galaxy, the Milky Way, just shouldn't be
01:03here. Then in the 1970s, we discovered that stars are, again, moving way too fast.
01:13There has to be an extra source of gravity to hold the stars in. And the source of
01:20gravity can't come from something we see like stars or nebula or anything else that
01:25glows. Otherwise, we would have seen it. We would have accounted for it. There is
01:30something inside of galaxies. There is something inside of galaxy clusters that
01:34has mass, that has gravity, but isn't emitting any light. Since the 1970s, we've
01:42gone even further to solidify our understanding of dark matter or that we
01:48know it exists. From the earliest moments of the universe, we have the cosmic
01:53microwave background. This is leftover light from when the universe was just
01:57three hundred eighty thousand years old. And by studying tiny little variations in
02:02that light, we can get a picture, a map of what the universe was like back then. And
02:06guess what? There was a lot of matter back then that didn't interact with light. So
02:11we have all these different pieces of evidence that all fit together and all
02:17point to dark matter. Very likely, dark matter or invisible matter is streaming
02:24through the room you're in right now. But it doesn't interact with light, doesn't
02:28interact with charged particles, it doesn't interact with normal matter. So you
02:32just don't see it. You just don't care about it. It's invisible to you. But at the
02:36very largest scales, it affects how things move. What we do know for sure is that the
02:43dark matter does exist.
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