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Almost half of the matter of the universe is yet hidden from observation, literally unknown to us. Scientists have discovered the fast radio waves and faint X-rays, where all the unfathomable data is located. In a study published in Nature Astronomy on June 16, 2025, which used fast radio bursts (FRBs) in order to track the ordinary matter distribution across the universe within the nearby galaxies and in space. Another study used X-ray data to determine the long, hot gas filament that combines the four galaxy clusters. This study was published in Astronomy and Astrophysics.

A Cosmic Mystery: Where Is the Missing Matter?

As per NASA, ordinary matter includes everything which is visible and tangible, such as people, stars and planets. It is comprised of neutrons, protons or brayons. However, this accounts for around 15% of the total matter in the universe; the remaining is dark matter. Half of the baryonic matter is considered missing, and the reason for it is too diffuse to find it directly. This is scattered matter around the cosmos as a fine mist.

What Counts as Ordinary Matter

This hidden matter has been mapped using FRBs, intense millisecond-long pulses from galaxies located far away. With the help of 70 FRBs, which included one from 9 billion light years away, the scientists determined that around 76% of the ordinary matter lies within the galaxies, 15% around them in halos and other inside the galaxies.

A Unified Picture of the Universe’s Baryonic Matter

One more team examined the faint X-ray emissions to visualise matter from a 23 million light-year-long gas filament. Through noise filtering and analysing X-ray photons, the team found the gas to be over 10 million degrees Celsius with 10 protons per cubic meter, aligning with what models had suggested after predicting.

Implications for Galaxy Formation and Future Research

Altogether, these studies offer a clear picture of how and where ordinary matter exists in the universe. As scientists now combine methods like X-ray detection and FRB mapping, they are confident in the galaxy formation and other major cosmic secrets in depth.

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ISS Experiment Shows Moss Spores Can Survive Harsh Space Environment

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A hardy moss species survived 283 days on the outside of the ISS, enduring vacuum, radiation and extreme temperatures. More than 80% of its spores lived and germinated back on Earth. The findings reveal surprising resilience in early land plants and may support future Moon and Mars ecosystem designs.

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NASA’s Perseverance Rover Finds Metal-Rich Rock on Mars: What You Need to Know

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NASA’s Perseverance rover has identified Phippsaksla, a sculpted, metal-rich boulder in Jezero Crater with an unusually high iron-nickel composition. The rock’s chemistry strongly suggests it is a meteorite formed elsewhere in the solar system. Its presence within impact-shaped terrain offers fresh clues about ancient asteroids and helps scientists reconstruct key…

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Asteroid 2024 YR4: Earth Safe, but New Data Shows Small 2032 Lunar Impact Risk

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Asteroid 2024 YR4 has been cleared as an Earth threat, but updated observations show a small chance it could hit the Moon in 2032. Space agencies are monitoring the asteroid closely, expecting new data to narrow uncertainties and determine whether the lunar-impact probability will drop or rise.

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