DARK MATTER GALAXY DEBUNKED
Astronomers claimed a galaxy was 98 per cent dark matter… but they were wrong
B ack in 2016, researchers claimed to have found a galaxy made almost completely of dark matter. Now that claim has fallen apart. The galaxy, Dragonfly 44 (DF44), belongs to a class of mysterious objects known as ultra-diffuse galaxies, or UDGs. Researchers have debated since the 1980s whether these vast, dim objects have a low mass, like dwarf galaxies smeared across huge reaches of space, or are heavy, Milky Way-style galaxies that seem dim for two reasons: because they have almost no stars, and because a huge fraction of their mass is dark matter found in the outer fringes of the galaxy in so-called dark matter haloes that emit no light. In a paper published in 2016 in the Astrophysical Journal Letters, scientists argued that DF44 was one of these galaxies with a big dark matter halo and few stars. They estimated its mass and found it was at least 98 per cent dark matter.