204k views
4 votes
Dynamo

Due to travelling faster than light, dark matter has a higher than usual mass in relation to its resting mass, thus accounting for the large 'missing' mass around galaxies. ... Dark matter is therefore non-baryonic, travelling faster than light and has a mass half that of a photon.​

2 Answers

3 votes

Step-by-step explanation:

Due to travelling faster than light, dark matter has a higher than usual mass in relation to its resting mass, thus accounting for the large 'missing' mass around galaxies. ... Dark matter is therefore non-baryonic, travelling faster than light and has a mass half that of a photon.

User EthanB
by
8.4k points
6 votes

Step-by-step explanation:

Due to travelling faster than light, dark matter has a higher than usual mass in relation to its resting mass, thus accounting for the large 'missing' mass around galaxies. ... Dark matter is therefore non-baryonic, travelling faster than light and has a mass half that of a photon.

User Max
by
8.1k points
Welcome to QAmmunity.org, where you can ask questions and receive answers from other members of our community.