 Quote by hms.tech
let me rephrase that, is dark matter visible to the eye ?
Does it emit e.m radiation in the visible region of the spectrum ?
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"dark matter" does not emit radiation in the visible region or any other region of the EM spectrum...otherwise we would be able to detect it, and not just theorize its existence. the best evidence of the existence of dark matter is indirect - that is, we can't detect dark matter directly, but we can see its effects on ordinary matter. take spiral galaxies for instance - surely their inner regions orbit their respective galactic centers faster than their outer regions...and yet the outer regions still appear to orbit their respective galactic centers much faster than their detectable masses suggest. and so some scientists theorize that there is a substantial amount of "dark matter" in those outer regions (that cannot be seen by any ordinary means of detection) that provide the additional gravity necessary to account for the faster-than-predicted orbits of the outer regions of spiral galaxies about their respective galactic centers.
so your hypothesis that there is mass associated w/ dark matter is in line w/ dark matter theory, b/c even though it does not radiate anywhere in the EM spectrum, its gravitational effects can be detected.