Invisible dark matter

By: James V. Kohl | Published on: July 21, 2016

Scientists looking for invisible dark matter can’t find any

Excerpt: “Over 80 percent of our matter is in this dark matter form. You and I are the flotsam and jetsam; dark matter is the sea,” Gaitskell said. “That’s why one doesn’t give up. We’ve got to figure out what this dark matter component is.”

When pressed, Gaitskell acknowledged the possibility, however slight and unlikely, that scientists are looking for something that isn’t there.

See also: Architecture of the symmetric core of the nuclear pore
Uniting Cryo-ET and Cryo-EM places what’s known about ecological variation and ecological adaptation on Earth into the context of what is known about links from angstroms to ecosystems via the structure and function of macromolecular assemblies.
When researchers fail to discover anything new about dark matter but discover new interactions between quantized energy (sunlight) and water molecules that were unexpected, they inadvertently support the claims of serious scientists that can be interpreted in the context of facts. The shows that most theorists cannot answer even the most basic questions that Schrodinger (1944) addressed in “What is Life?”


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