Hubble Looks for Missing Matter

This illustration shows how the Hubble Space Telescope searches for missing ordinary matter, called baryons, by looking at the light from quasars several billion light-years away. Imprinted on that light are the spectral fingerprints of the missing ordinary matter that absorbs the light at specific frequencies (shown in the colorful spectra at right). The missing baryonic matter helps trace out the structure of intergalactic space, called the "cosmic web." Credit: NASA, ESA, and A. Feild (STScI)


Hubble Survey Finds Missing Matter, Probes Intergalactic Web

May 20, 2008 | User rating: 4.6 / 5 after 49 vote(s)
Although the universe contains billions of galaxies, only a small amount of its matter is locked up in these behemoths. Most of the universe's matter that was created during and just after the Big Bang must be found elsewhere.