Black Holes and Dark Matter—Are They One and the Same?
3 Articles
3 Articles
Black holes and dark matter—are they one and the same?
Primordial black holes created in the first instants after the Big Bang—tiny ones smaller than the head of a pin and supermassive ones covering billions of miles—may account for all of the dark matter in the universe.
A New Way to Detect Primordial Black Holes Through Their Hawking Radiation
Scientists propose a revolutionary new method to detect primordial black holes by hunting for their Hawking radiation. Instead of searching for faint background signals, researchers suggest using the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station to watch for distinctive spikes in positron particles as these ancient black holes pass through our solar system, emitting Hawking radiation.
Black holes should above all be able to do one thing: swallow everything up. But the processes in them are more complex than that and still challenge astrophysics today.
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