Every galaxy appears to carry far more mass than telescopes can see. That invisible material, known as dark matter, may be linked to a hidden fifth dimension whose geometry naturally shapes how dark matter particles behave, according to a theory developed at the University of Sheffield.
Dark matter has occupied both physics and science fiction for decades, appearing in stories ranging from planet-destroying vortexes in Star Trek to the ‘Dust’ that sustains the multiverse in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials fantasy trilogy.
In real cosmology, it remains one of physics’ deepest unresolved questions. Researchers infer its existence from its powerful gravitational influence, which helps hold galaxies together, but no experiment has directly detected it or established what it is made of.
The idea that dark matter could occupy an unseen extra dimension has received growing attention. A study published in Physical Review D now extends that possibility by proposing a framework that could explain both dark matter’s behavior and its continued resistance to detection.
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