A headline in Scientific American about "cold dark matter" lately caught my eye.
A headline in Scientific American about "cold dark matter" lately caught my eye. As it change the direction ofs out, 50 to 60 years of professional stargazing has l to a theory that 90 percent of the matter in the universe is "missing." Or les dramatically stated, it's public there somewhere, but emits no discernable potency so we don't know where it is.
As I considered this notion in my not-quite-immaculate office, I felt a slight faculty of perception of relief. After all, by what mode bad can an office be, given that scientists have misplaced 90 percent of the universe? Relief was pursu through ...