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Ive heard that they are made up of W.I.M.P.S, an d C.H. A. M.P.S and that it is what the majority of space consists of. Also, there are even invisible energy showers that rain down on earth from time to time.

My Question is, Where do you think all the Black Matter comes from?

2006-10-04 08:16:14 · 9 answers · asked by reese 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

9 answers

You find out. Win Nobel Prize. Be famous for centuries.

2006-10-04 23:48:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Black matter is all of the matter in the universe that does not emit or reflect light. (If it could do either it would be light matter.) Black energy is the same thing it is not visible by any means we have available now. But we are beginning to find evidence of the existence of both of these phenomena.

It comes from the left overs of the big bang and from collapsed dead stars. There are also black holes in the center of galaxies that hold each them together.

2006-10-04 15:23:51 · answer #2 · answered by my_iq_135 5 · 0 0

Black matter is actually called Dark Matter. I don't what it's made of but it's the framework of the universe and its about 90% of the universe.

As far as the invisible energy it's possible it comes from neutron stars that emits powerful jets of radition that can be seeing from across the universe.

2006-10-04 15:28:52 · answer #3 · answered by SARSAT-BT20 2 · 0 0

Dark matter (not "black matter") does make up about 90% of the matter in the universe. There is nothing inherently special about dark matter: it just isn't luminous like stars and galaxies. Dark matter may be stars that don't have enough mass/energy to create fusion (the process that lights up stars).

2006-10-04 15:57:50 · answer #4 · answered by Logan 5 · 0 0

The so called "Dark Matter" appears to be energy that we cannot see in the form of wimps, axions, photinos, supersymmetric particles, etc.
It all came from the same source, i.e the "Big Bang" including all visible and detectable matter and Dark Matter.

2006-10-04 15:33:35 · answer #5 · answered by FrogDog 4 · 0 0

most of the universe is dark matter

2006-10-04 17:25:37 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

.doesn't come from anywhere..it's been there all along..the dimension that divides time and space continuance

2006-10-04 15:19:04 · answer #7 · answered by Roxy 5 · 0 0

big explosions of supernovas.

2006-10-04 15:19:52 · answer #8 · answered by James Blond 4 · 0 0

i am not sure

2006-10-04 15:39:21 · answer #9 · answered by greenmonkey1195 1 · 0 0

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