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Making darkness visible

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posted on 2024-09-24, 05:11 authored by Alan DuffyAlan Duffy
In the last 50 years astronomers have come to realise that there exists an invisible type of mass in the Universe, outweighing all of the atoms in every star, planet and person five times over. It' responsible for holding the galaxy together, for making the galaxies form where they do in the cosmos and is our best guide to physics beyond the Higgs boson, aka the 'god' particle. Yet astronomers are no nearer to understanding its nature. Using a combination of baby universes created on Australia's most powerful telescopes, next generation telescopes like the Australian SKA Pathfinder, and a wine glass, Alan will explore what we know about the invisible and how Australia may uncover the most sought after particle in physics with the world's first dark matter detector in the Southern Hemisphere, SABRE. Presented on 17 June 2016.

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Swinburne University of Technology Free Astronomy Public Lectures, Melbourne, Australia, 2016

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Swinburne University of Technology

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Copyright © 2016 Swinburne University of Technology and the presenter.

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eng

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