Fast Radio Bursts Reveal Universe’s Missing Matter Hidden in Cosmic Intergalactic Fog

Fast radio bursts reveal missing baryonic matter hidden in intergalactic space.

Advertisement
Written by Gadgets 360 Staff | Updated: 19 June 2025 23:45 IST
Highlights
  • FRBs detect baryonic matter hidden in vast intergalactic regions
  • Missing normal matter traced by the slowing of distant cosmic radio bur
  • Caltech and CfA used 69 localized FRBs to solve the baryonic matter puz

Radio bursts help map the universe’s hidden baryonic matter in cosmic fog

Photo Credit: Pexels

Astronomers have at last found the universe's missing ordinary matter, the particles that formed in the first few minutes after the Big Bang and that account for everything we see around us, from the Earth to the stars. Some fast radio bursts (FRBs), vanishingly fast, hugely energetic signals from deep space, have allowed scientists to finally detect some of the missing normal matter that had eluded them for decades. 

Fast Radio Bursts Reveal Hidden Baryonic Matter Spread Across Vast Intergalactic Cosmic Fog

According to a mission update published in Nature Astronomy, researchers from Caltech and the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics looked at 69 FRBs, some of which travelled up to 9.1 billion light-years, to find baryonic matter that is spread out in the space between galaxies. Using instruments like Caltech's Deep Synoptic Array and Australia's ASKAP helped the research locate and home in on the FRBs, which are too small for regular sensors to detect.

So there is a type of missing matter that has been found: It is made of particles, of course, but we interact with those particles only secondhand, via the almost unimaginably infrequent creative collision. FRBs, the cosmic headlights, have validated this by revealing baryonic matter — 76 percent in the inter­galactic, 15 percent in galactic haloes, and 9 percent within galaxies — to be distributed much more uniformly in space compared to dark matter.

Advertisement

The first observational evidence of this distribution that they predicted has been obtained, indicating that the FRBs can be used as a “smart tool” to probe the large-scale structure and the evolution history of the universe. This light distortion seen from these bursts is now a new tool to explore the faraway areas in space.

Advertisement

Caltech's DSA-2000 radio array could detect more than 10,000 FRBs every year, which would significantly advance the field of radio astronomy. This could provide a way to better understand the formation and evolution of galaxies and to more accurately measure cosmic structures. Every new FRB is a new chance to fill in the map of the unknown universe.

 

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OnePlus 15R Confirmed to Come With 32-Megapixel Selfie Camera
  2. Apple Finally Releases iOS 26.2 Update for iPhone With These Features
  3. Supernatural Thriller Jatadhara Now Streaming on OTT: All the Details
  4. Aaromaley Now Streaming on JioHotstar: Everything You Need to Know
  1. Kepler and TESS Discoveries Help Astronomers Confirm Over 6,000 Exoplanets Orbiting Other Stars
  2. Supernatural Thriller Jatadhara Arrives on OTT: Where to Watch Sonakashi Sinha-Starrer Film Online?
  3. OnePlus 15R Confirmed to Come With 32-Megapixel Selfie Camera, 4K Video Recording Support
  4. Rocket Lab Clears Final Tests for New 'Hungry Hippo' Fairing on Neutron Rocket
  5. Apple Rolls Out iOS 26.2 Update for iPhone With Liquid Glass Customisation, Changes to Apple Music, and More
  6. Aaromaley Now Streaming on JioHotstar: Everything You Need to Know About This Tamil Romantic-Comedy
  7. Astronomers Observe Star’s Wobbling Orbit, Confirming Einstein’s Frame-Dragging
  8. Galaxy Collisions Found to Activate Supermassive Black Holes, Euclid Data Shows
  9. JWST Detects Oldest Supernova Ever Seen, Linked to GRB 250314A
  10. Chandra’s New X-Ray Mapping Exposes the Invisible Engines Powering Galaxy Clusters
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.