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Astronomers find mystery dark object in distant universe
The black ring and central dot show infrared image of a distant galaxy distorted by a gravitation lens. Orange/reg shows radio waves from the same object. The inset shows a pinch caused by another, much smaller, dark gravitational lens (white blob).
Astronomers find mystery dark object in distant universe
by Clarence Oxford
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Oct 10, 2025

Using a global network of telescopes, astronomers have detected the lowest-mass dark object yet found in the universe. Finding more such objects and understanding their nature could rule out some theories about the nature of dark matter, the mystery substance that makes up about a quarter of the universe. The work is described in two papers published Oct. 9 in Nature Astronomy and Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Because the object does not emit any light or other radiation, it was detected by the way its gravity distorts light passing through or near it-an effect called gravitational lensing. Based on the distortion, astronomers can infer the amount of matter in the unseen object.

The new object is so small that it was detected by inducing a small "pinch" in the distorted image caused by a much larger object, like a flaw in a funhouse mirror.

"It's an impressive achievement to detect such a low mass object at such a large distance from us," said Chris Fassnacht, professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of California, Davis, and a co-author on the Nature Astronomy paper. "Finding low-mass objects such as this one is critical for learning about the nature of dark matter."

The mystery object has a mass about one million times that of our Sun. Its nature is unknown: it could be a clump of dark matter 100 times smaller than any previously detected, or it might be a very compact, inactive dwarf galaxy.

Although imperceptible except for its gravitational effects, dark matter is thought to shape the distribution of galaxies, stars and other visible bodies across the sky. A key question is whether dark matter can exist in small clumps without any stars-evidence that could confirm or refute some theories about its nature.

Using telescopes worldwide

The team used instruments including the Green Bank Telescope (GBT), West Virginia; the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), Hawai'i; and the European Very Long Baseline Interferometric Network (EVN)-which includes radio telescopes in Europe, Asia, South Africa and Puerto Rico-to create an Earth-sized "super-telescope" and capture the subtle signals of gravitational lensing by the dark object.

It is by a hundred-fold the lowest-mass object yet found by this technique, suggesting that the method could be used to find other, similar objects.

"Given the sensitivity of our data, we were expecting to find at least one dark object, so our discovery is consistent with the so-called 'cold dark matter theory' on which much of our understanding of how galaxies form is based," said lead author Devon Powell at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics (MPA), Germany. "Having found one, the question now is whether we can find more and whether the numbers will still agree with the models."

The team is further analyzing the data to better understand the nature of the dark object and is also looking for more examples in other parts of the sky.

Research Report:A million-solar-mass object detected at a cosmological distance using gravitational imaging

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Uiversity of California - Davis
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