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Sorry if this has already made the rounds here - I'm relatively new. Recently, a handful of Cambridge physicist completed a survay of dwarf galaxy movements through a portion of the Milky Way. The upshot of this study has been to peg some solid numbers to this elusive stuff we call dark matter. <br /><br />Here is a reprint of the story by the UK Telegraph. This appears so recent that most detailed science oriented sites have yet to begin discussing it (and the team in question has yet to submit their paper to an Astrophysical journal).<br /><br /><br /><blockquote><font class="small">In reply to:</font><hr /><p><br /> Triumph of mind over dark matter<br />(Filed: 07/02/2006)<br /><br />It makes up nearly a quarter of the Universe, holds our galaxy in place, but cannot be seen.<br /><br />Dark matter has evaded all attempts to detect and illuminate it in the 73 years since its existence was first hypothesized.<br /><br />Now British astronomers have moved an important step closer to lifting the veil on the elusive material that has mystified generations of scientists, by calculating some of its basic physical properties for the first time.<br /><br />Prof Gerry Gilmore, of the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge, and colleagues used the world's most advanced optical telescope system to observe 12 dwarf galaxies around the edge of our own galaxy, the Milky Way.<br /><br />By studying the movement and mass of stars within these galaxies, they were able to calculate the minimum density and distribution of the dark matter around them.<br /><br />Their findings, expected to be published in a scientific journal soon, add substantially to what is known about the material that provides the cosmic glue that, through its gravitational force, keeps stars in their positions within galaxies.<br /><br />Prof Gilmore said: "This is the first time we have determined the property of dark matter robustly in a way that we expect will give us some real clues as to what the real physics of</p></blockquote>