The International Space Station with the particle-detecting Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer visible at centre leftNASA
The neighbourhood of space where the International Space Station (ISS) resides seems to be littered with unexpected quantities of antimatter – and the culprit may be mysterious dark matter particles.
“We were very surprised. This is weird, and the mechanism that is producing this amount of antimatter should be something exotic,” says Pedro De La Torre Luque at the Autonomous University of Madrid in Spain. He and his colleagues found hints of this antimatter by analysing 15 years of data from the Alpha Magnetic…
Space may be filled with more antimatter than we can explain
Related Posts
Recent whale deaths highlight risks from Antarctica’s booming krill fishery
This photo provided by the British Antarctic Survey in October 2023 shows an Antarctic krill (Euphausia suberba). Credit: Chris Gilbert/British Antarctic Survey, File Two humpback whales were found dead and…
How life began on Earth: Model suggests ancient Earth had organic-rich atmosphere
Diagram of the atmospheric evolution of Earth’s ancient atmosphere estimated by this study. Credit: Astrobiology (2024). DOI: 10.1089/ast.2024.0048 The key to unlocking the secrets of distant planets starts right here…