Did the Milky Way Destroy Ancient Black Hole Clusters? New Study Brings Scientists Closer to Solving the Dark Matter Mystery
Dark matter is one of the biggest mysteries in the Universe. Scientists know it exists because its gravity affects stars, galaxies, and even the large-scale structure of the cosmos. However, no one has directly detected it yet or knows exactly what it is made of. One interesting idea is that dark matter may be made of Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) . These are not ordinary black holes formed from dying stars. Instead, they may have formed just a fraction of a second after the Big Bang, when the Universe was extremely hot and dense. For many years, scientists believed that these black holes, if they exist, would be spread throughout space as individual objects. But some theories suggest something different—they may have formed in large clusters . A new study by researchers Tkachev and Pilipenko investigates what happened to these clusters over billions of years. Their results show that many of them may have slowly broken apart due to repeated gravitational encounters inside the Milky Wa...