Ultrasound Technology Is Behind the World’s First Chocolate-Infused Honey


Astronomers have long puzzled over the cause of a mysterious “glow” of very high energy gamma radiation emanating from the centre of our galaxy. One possibility is that dark matter – the unknown substance thought to make up more than 25% of the universe’s mass – might be involved. Now, a team led by researchers at Germany’s Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP) says that a flattened rather than spherical distribution of dark matter could account for the glow’s properties, bringing us a step closer to solving the mystery.
Dark matter is believed to be responsible for holding galaxies together. However, since it does not interact with light or other electromagnetic radiation, it can only be detected through its gravitational effects. Hence, while astrophysical and cosmological evidence has confirmed its presence, its true nature remains one of the greatest mysteries in modern physics.
“It’s extremely consequential and we’re desperately thinking all the time of ideas as to how we could detect it,” says Joseph Silk, an astronomer at Johns Hopkins University in the US and the Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris and Sorbonne University in France who co-led this research together with the AIP’s Moorits Mihkel Muru. “Gamma rays, and specifically the excess light we’re observing at the centre of our galaxy, could be our first clue.”
The problem, Muru explains, is that the way scientists have usually modelled dark matter to account for the excess gamma-ray radiation in astronomical observations was highly simplified. “This, of course, made the calculations easier, but simplifications always fuzzy the details,” he says. “We showed that in this case, the details are important: we can’t model dark matter as a perfectly symmetrical cloud and instead have to take into account the asymmetry of the cloud.”
Muru adds that the team’s findings, which are detailed in Phys. Rev. Lett., provide a boost to the “dark matter annihilation” explanation of the excess radiation. According to the standard model of cosmology, all galaxies – including our own Milky Way – are nested inside huge haloes of dark matter. The density of this dark matter is highest at the centre, and while it primarily interacts through gravity, some models suggest that it could be made of massive, neutral elementary particles that are their own antimatter counterparts. In these dense regions, therefore, such dark matter species could be mutually annihilating, producing substantial amounts of radiation.
Pierre Salati, an emeritus professor at the Université Savoie Mont Blanc, France, who was not involved in this work, says that in these models, annihilation plays a crucial role in generating a dark matter component with an abundance that agrees with cosmological observations. “Big Bang nucleosynthesis sets stringent bounds on these models as a result of the overall concordance between the predicted elemental abundances and measurements, although most models do survive,” Salati says. “One of the most exciting aspects of such explanations is that dark matter species might be detected through the rare antimatter particles – antiprotons, positrons and anti-deuterons – that they produce as they currently annihilate inside galactic halos.”
Silvia Manconi of the Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Hautes Energies (LPTHE), France, who was also not involved in the study, describes it as “interesting and stimulating”. However, she cautions that – as is often the case in science – reality is probably more complex than even advanced simulations can capture. “This is not the first time that galaxy simulations have been used to study the implications of the excess and found non-spherical shapes,” she says, though she adds that the simulations in the new work offer “significant improvements” in terms of their spatial resolution.
Manconi also notes that the study does not demonstrate how the proposed distribution of dark matter would appear in data from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope’s Large Area Telescope (LAT), or how it would differ quantitatively from observations of a distribution of old stars. Forthcoming observations with radio telescopes such as MeerKat and FAST, she adds, may soon identify pulsars in this region of the galaxy, shedding further light on other possible contributions to the excess of gamma rays.
Muru acknowledges that better modelling and observations are still needed to rule out other possible hypotheses. “Studying dark matter is very difficult, because it doesn’t emit or block light, and despite decades of searching, no experiment has yet detected dark matter particles directly,” he tells Physics World. “A confirmation that this observed excess radiation is caused by dark matter annihilation through gamma rays would be a big leap forward.”
New gamma-ray telescopes with higher resolution, such as the Cherenkov Telescope Array, could help settle this question, he says. If these telescopes, which are currently under construction, fail to find star-like sources for the glow and only detect diffuse radiation, that would strengthen the alternative dark matter annihilation explanation.
Muru adds that a “smoking gun” for dark matter would be a signal that matches current theoretical predictions precisely. In the meantime, he and his colleagues plan to work on predicting where dark matter should be found in several of the dwarf galaxies that circle the Milky Way.
“It’s possible we will see the new data and confirm one theory over the other,” Silk says. “Or maybe we’ll find nothing, in which case it’ll be an even greater mystery to resolve.”
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Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman says work on the service’s “objective force” analysis is nearly complete, publication likely in 2026
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Humanity is losing the genetic diversity that sustains life on Earth at a pace that should alarm every nation. According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, about 75% of the world’s crop varieties have disappeared in the last century. According to Marie Haga, former Executive Director of the Global Crop Trust, it’s closer to […]
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The deal strengthens domestic access to energetics and propellants at a time of rising demand for munitions
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It is book week here at Physics World and over the course of three days we are presenting conversations with the authors of three fascinating and fun books about physics. Today, my guest is the physicist Daniel Whiteson, who along with the artist Andy Warner has created the delightful book Do Aliens Speak Physics?.
Is physics universal, or is it shaped by human perspective? This will be a very important question if and when we are visited by an advanced alien civilization. Would we recognize our visitors’ alien science – or indeed, could a technologically-advanced civilization have no science at all? And would we even be able to communicate about science with our alien guests?
Whiteson, who is a particle physicist at the University of California Irvine, tackles these profound questions and much more in this episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast.
This episode is supported by the APS Global Physics Summit, which takes place on 15–20 March, 2026, in Denver, Colorado, and online.
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In this episode of Space Minds, host Mike Gruss sits down with Marshall Smith, CEO of Starlab Space for a fireside chat at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center, the next installment of the Center’s Discovery Series.
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With ESA members set to decide on the agency’s budget for the next three years, all eyes on how much Germany will offer to support an ambitious series of programs.
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Are you a science writer attending the 2025 World Conference of Science Journalists (WCSJ) in Pretoria, South Africa? To mark the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology, Physics World (published by the Institute of Physics) and Physics Magazine (published by the American Physical Society) are teaming up to host a special Quantum Pitch Competition for WCSJ attendees.
The two publications invite journalists to submit story ideas on any aspect of quantum science and technology. At least two selected pitches will receive paid assignments and be published in one of the magazines.
Interviews with physicists and career profiles – either in academia or industry – are especially encouraged, but the editors will also consider news stories, podcasts, visual media and other creative storytelling formats that illuminate the quantum world for diverse audiences.
Participants should submit a brief pitch (150–300 words recommended), along with a short journalist bio and a few representative clips, if available. Editors from Physics World and Physics Magazine will review all submissions and announce the winning pitches after the conference. Pitches should be submitted to physics@aps.org by 8 December 2025, with the subject line “2025WCSJ Quantum Pitch”.
Whether you’re drawn to quantum materials, computing, sensing or the people shaping the field, this is an opportunity to feature fresh voices and ideas in two leading physics publications.
This article forms part of Physics World‘s contribution to the 2025 International Year of Quantum Science and Technology (IYQ), which aims to raise global awareness of quantum physics and its applications.
Stayed tuned to Physics World and our international partners throughout the year for more coverage of the IYQ.
Find out more on our quantum channel.
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A 3D-printed structure called a kagome tube could form the backbone of a new system for muffling damaging vibrations. The structure is part of a class of materials known as topological mechanical metamaterials, and unlike previous materials in this group, it is simple enough to be deployed in real-world situations. According to lead developer James McInerney of the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, US, it could be used as shock protection for sensitive systems found in civil and aerospace engineering applications.
McInerney and colleagues’ tube-like design is made from a lattice of beams arranged in such a way that low-energy vibrational modes called floppy modes become localized to one side. “This provides good properties for isolating vibrations because energy input into the system on the floppy side does not propagate to the other side,” McInerney says.
The key to this desirable behaviour, he explains, is the arrangement of the beams that form the lattice structure. Using a pattern first proposed by the 19th century physicist James Clerk Maxwell, the beams are organized into repeating sub-units to form stable, two-dimensional structures known as topological Maxwell lattices.
Previous versions of these lattices could not support their own weight. Instead, they were attached to rigid external mounts, making it impractical to integrate them into devices. The new design, in contrast, is made by folding a flat Maxwell lattice into a cylindrical tube that is self-supporting. The tube features a connected inner and outer layer – a kagome bilayer – and its radius can be precisely engineered to give it the topological behaviour desired.
The researchers, who detail their work in Physical Review Applied, first tested their structure numerically by attaching a virtual version to a mechanically sensitive sample and a source of low-energy vibrations. As expected, the tube diverted the vibrations away from the sample and towards the other end of the tube.
Next, they developed a simple spring-and-mass model to understand the tube’s geometry by considering it as a simple monolayer. This modelling indicated that the polarization of the tube should be similar to the polarization of the monolayer. They then added rigid connectors to the tube’s ends and used a finite-element method to calculate the frequency-dependent patterns of vibrations propagating across the structure. They also determined the effective stiffness of the lattice as they applied loads parallel and perpendicular to it.
The researchers are targeting vibration-isolation applications that would benefit from a passive support structure, especially in cases where the performance of alternative passive mechanisms, such as viscoelastomers, is temperature-limited. “Our tubes do not necessarily need to replace other vibration isolation mechanisms,” McInerney explains. “Rather, they can enhance the capabilities of these by having the load-bearing structure assist with isolation.”
The team’s first and most important task, McInerney adds, will be to explore the implications of physically mounting the kagome tube on its vibration isolation structures. “The numerical study in our paper uses idealized mounting conditions so that the input and output are perfectly in phase with the tube vibrations,” he says. “Accounting for the potential impedance mismatch between the mounts and the tube will enable us to experimentally validate our work and provide realistic design scenarios.”
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Swedish Space Corp. has rolled out a new ground station service designed to provide streamlined support for operators of small satellites and constellations.
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