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Q&A: Dark Matter
Q:
Is it true that 95% of the universe is empty and consists of nothing?
A:
It doesn't seem to be true that 95% of the universe is empty and
consisting of nothing, however it does appear that 95% of the universe
is invisible to us! Observations of the universe so far make us think
it is made up of 3 constituents. First, ordinary matter, protons and
neutrons, the molecules that make up human beings, the Earth, and other
astrophysical bodies. Second, another type of matter called "dark
matter," which seems to behave like ordinary matter in that it clumps
up into galaxies and clusters of galaxies, but which we cannot see in
any wavelength that we have looked at so far. This includes visible
light, X-ray light, gamma ray light, and radio. The third is "dark
energy" which does not behave like ordinary matter, we do not see it
clump up, but it pervades all of space and varies slowly in time. Dark
energy has also been called anti-gravity because its effect is to speed
up the expansion of the universe, or appear to. Recent observations show that the
expansion of the universe is accelerating, not slowing down or at least
slowing down the acceleration as some of us expected.
It seems that 70% of the universe is made of dark energy, 25% of dark
matter, and only 5% of ordinary matter like you and me. See
http://chandra.harvard.edu/chronicle/0403/dark/index.html
More information describing the different parts of the universe:
On our Chandra web site we have an essay on the dark matter
mystery:
http://chandra.harvard.edu/xray_astro/dark_matter.html
And other answers we've given to dark matter questions:
http://chandra.harvard.edu/resources/faq/dmatter/dmatter-main.html