If dark matter and dark energy are 95 percent of everything, shouldn't we all be asking questions about that? What does that look like?
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Dark matter is interesting. Basically, the universe is heavier than it should be. There's whole swathes of stuff we can't account for.
From a scientific point of view, our mission is to seek answers to the fundamental questions about the universe. Many are open - we don't know about dark matter, which accounts for a quarter of the universe's matter, nor do we know why there's antimatter.
Dark energy is perhaps the biggest mystery in physics.
If you're puzzled by what dark energy is, you're in good company.
Science has proved that everything is energy, and now they have dark energy, dark matter. They don't call it all-embracing consciousness; they call it dark because they can't measure it. You know, paint it black.
Among the questions we have in mind: dark matter, antimatter, and matter symmetry.
Don't assume that what we currently think is out there is the full story. Go after the dark matter, in whatever field you choose to explore.
It would be so weird if we knew just as much as we needed to know to answer all the questions of the universe. Wouldn't that be freaky? Whereas the probability is high that there is a vast reality that we have no way to perceive, that's actually bearing down on us now and influencing everything.
Basically, we are a whole world of people desperately trying to figure out what is the dark side of our natures and how much can we explore without becoming something else.
The missing link in cosmology is the nature of dark matter and dark energy.
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