Why Dark Matter Matters

Dark matter is that invisible nothing that makes up a bulk of mass in our universe. Using NASA’s Chandra X-ray observatory and other ground based observatories to closely examine the “Bullet Cluster,” astronomers are now able to tell us that hidden in the emptiness of darkness out in space is a passageway into our unworldly past and unfolding present. With the aid of the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have determined that a clump of galaxies that must have formed over the most recent 100 million years is the result of a collision of two smaller galactic clusters. With gravitational lensing it has been discovered that the force of gravity is stronger in those void (dark matter) areas in space. It is the gravitational pull that keeps everything from flying apart. To some this is the clearest evidence that dark matter exists as a means to explain earlier and potentially new observations about the universe.

If you are confused, consider why dark matters. Astronomers have used dark matter for some 70 years to explain their observations about the way in which our universe behaves. Some believe that the universe is held together by a force that is even greater than mere gravitational pull on invisible matter. Less conjecture about dark matter is possible with a better explanation of how gravity affects matter in general.

Dark is understood to mean the absence of light. In reality it is much deeper than that. The space around us is naturally dark. It exists everywhere. Only “dark suckers” like light bulbs can replace dark matter (darkens). Supposedly all objects have darkness embedded within them, bound into the electrons of the surface material. All surfaces can then be thought of as a “host material” for darkness, holding back its own energy that is released when light hits it, making it reflective and heated. Surfaces can become so heated they can glow with incandescence. Cooling off is the dark being sucked back into the surface of the object.

Even Bell Labs is getting into the dark sucker act. For years it was believed that electric bulbs emitted light. Now Bell Labs has proven that they suck dark. A spokesperson for Bell Labs suggested that the existence of dark means that a mass heavier and faster-moving than light exists. Consider that where there is light there is the greatest mass of darkons. Basically there is evidence now that dark has mass and it is heavier than light. Light floats to the top of a body of water, for instance, leaving the depths darker the deeper you go.

Darkons are now understood to be small indivisible chunks that can be harnessed as energy. Once an object becomes reflective of light, it too becomes a dark sucker. Some believe that darkness does not move, but that it is always present and light is merely laid over it. Darkness and light are polar opposites. They are like Yin and Yang. But when we talk about the speed of light, there is also a speed to darkness. It can also be sucked into the lighted object to the point that it needs to escape back out. The sun with its dark spots seems to evidence the overabundance of darkens that are leaking back into space. The leaking process interrupts communication systems on earth.

All of this may seem far-fetched and a tad difficult to understand, but it clearly reveals that dark matters. Astronomers and scientists are working at a feverish pace to develop new instrumentation to measure the speed and energy of dark. For now, how much dark matters may be the deep, dark secret of the power companies. Some believe that stockpiles of what are explained to be coal, behind fenced and secure areas in generation plant facilities may in fact be stored dark matter. These suspicious eyes may believe that DC means “Dark Conspiracy.” For theorists, scientists, astronomers, and power plants the sight of nothing is elating. To them dark matters . . . a lot.

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