Another fundamentally
invisible type of matter vastly outweighs it, accounting for 26.8 percent.
Not exact matches
We once thought that dark
matter might be made up
of large objects such as black holes or exotic
types of faint stars — neutron stars or white dwarfs — that are nearly
invisible to our telescopes.
Observations
of galaxies and
of the Universe's primordial radiation imply that the vast majority
of matter is
of a
type that is
invisible and interacts almost exclusively through gravity.