Why two terms "Dark Energy" and "Dark Matter"

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Dark Matter is an assumption to explain gravitational effects on visible matter, while Dark Energy is used to explain the universe's expansion. Although mass and energy are equivalent according to Einstein's theory, Dark Matter and Dark Energy represent different phenomena. Dark Matter behaves like additional mass, influencing galaxy rotation and gravitational lensing, while Dark Energy accelerates the universe's expansion through negative pressure. Both are termed "dark" due to their elusive nature in observations, but they have distinct roles in cosmology. Understanding these differences is crucial for grasping the complexities of the universe.
atuldpatil
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As I understand "Dark Matter" is an _assumption_ of existence of matter in certain space, to explain gravitational effects on the matter around that space. But when it comes to "Dark Energy" it is another assumption to explain why universe is expanding.

But by Einstein's theory, mass and energy is same thing. Then why can't energy in the form of "Dark Matter" itself be assumed to explain expansion of universe? Won't it make simpler than assuming matter and energy separate?
 
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Because the effects are different: Dark matter acts as if there is extra matter, resulting in galaxy rotation curves not expected from luminous matter, or gravitational lensing where you wouldn't expect. It acts just like other matter does, gravitationally.

Dark energy, on the other hand, acts to accelerate the expansion of the universe, which you can't get from just chucking extra particles around.
 
"Dark" just means that we have a hard time observing it, which is why both dark matter and dark energy are called dark. They are two distinctly different effects. Dark energy in particular shouldn't be thought of as normal energy, which has mass and causes attraction, but as a form of energy that has negative pressure, acting repulsively.
 
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