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Hubble Just Found a Ghost Galaxy (99% Dark Matter)

2026-03-01 Science & Technology
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Anton Petrov
Anton Petrov
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Support this channel on Patreon to help me make this a full time job: https://www.patreon.com/whatdamath (Unreleased videos, extra footage, DMs, no ads) Alternatively, PayPal donations can be sent here: http://paypal.me/whatdamath Get a Wonderful Person Tee: https://teespring.com/stores/whatdamath More cool designs are on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3QFIrFX Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will talk about evidence of an exciting dark galaxy somewhere out there Links: Li, Dayi (David) et al. "Candidate Dark Galaxy-2: Validation and Analysis of an Almost Dark Galaxy in the Perseus Cluster" [https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/adddab] Li, Dayi et al. "Poisson cluster process models for detecting ultra-diffuse galaxies" [https://projecteuclid.org/journals/annals-of-applied-statistics/volume-19/issue-1/Poisson-cluster-process-models-for-detecting-ultra-diffuse-galaxies/10.1214/24-AOAS1916.full] van Dokkum, Pieter et al. "A High Stellar Velocity Dispersion and ~100 Globular Clusters For The Ultra-Diffuse Galaxy Dragonfly 44" [https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8205/828/1/L6] Montes, Mireia et al. "An almost dark galaxy with the mass of the Small Magellanic Cloud" [https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347667] Cannon, John M. et al. "The Alfalfa 'Almost Darks' Campaign: Pilot VLA HI Observations of Five High Mass-To-Light Ratio Systems" [https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/149/2/72] Liu, Xiao-Lan et al. "Discovery of a high-velocity cloud of the Milky Way as a potential dark galaxy" [https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.ads4057 Other videos: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qExaU3AS3E4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80x-x1YsCvE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V21YRa5Sy9M https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbAoyV8TRtA #darkmatter #darkgalaxy #astrophysics 0:00 Another bizarre galaxy - CDG-2 0:50 What is a dark galaxy? 2:40 New observations and a new study 4:05 Hypothesis about globular clusters and a confirmation 5:05 What this galaxy is 6:20 Other similar galaxies 7:55 Why are there no stars? explanations 8:45 Implications and conclusions Enjoy and please subscribe Bitcoin/Ethereum to spare? Donate them here to help this channel grow! bc1qnkl3nk0zt7w0xzrgur9pnkcduj7a3xxllcn7d4 or ETH: 0x60f088B10b03115405d313f964BeA93eF0Bd3DbF The hardware used to record these videos: New Camera: https://amzn.to/4pCVINS CPU: https://amzn.to/4qXIaxC Video Card: https://amzn.to/2M1W26C Motherboard: https://amzn.to/2JYGiQQ RAM: https://amzn.to/2Mwy2t4 PSU: https://amzn.to/2LZcrIH Case: https://amzn.to/2MwJZz4 Microphone: https://amzn.to/2t5jTv0 Mixer: https://amzn.to/2JOL0oF Recording and Editing: https://amzn.to/2LX6uvU Some of the above are affiliate links, meaning I would get a (very small) percentage of the price paid. Thank you to all Patreon supporters of this channel Special thanks also goes to all the wonderful supporters of the channel through YouTube Memberships Credit: Mark Garlick www.markgarlick.com Licenses used: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ and relevant Creative Commons licenses

Top Comments (10)

@davidolohowski 2026-03-02

David Li here, the first author of the paper. First of all, I would really love to thank Anton for covering this discovery, I’ve been a follower of the channel since I was in undergrad (almost 10 years ago), Never in a million years have I imagined my work will be featured in the channel. But most importantly, I never thought me and my team would have discovered a dark galaxy. Now back to the science bit. Firstly, the most important thing I would like to note is that CDG-2 is still a galaxy candidate. To put the hammer on the nail and confirm that this is indeed a galaxy, we need spectra and kinematic (motion) data for the globular clusters (GCs) to confirm they’re in a gravitationally bound system. However, simply based on the spatial distribution of the GCs, the chance that they are just randomly grouped together like in CDG-2 is astronomically low — we estimated that the probability of this happening is 1.5x10^-5. Basically near impossible. The actual thing that made us very sure that this is indeed a galaxy is the extremely faint glow around the 4 GCs that some people in the comment have noted. This faint, triangular shape of diffuse light is what we have been hunting for using Hubble, Euclid, and Subaru. Because this faint structure appeared in all the data from these telescopes, that’s how we’re sure this is a galaxy, and it may be the darkest one we’ve ever found so far. Combining the four GCs and the faint diffuse light, we can say CDG-2 is indeed a galaxy with 99% confidence. However, statistics and shapes don’t make a galaxy, we need actual physics, which is why we need the GC kinematic and spectra data to put that hammer on the nail — cue JWST. This is what we need to say that CDG-2 is a galaxy with 100% confidence. The second thing is the dark matter of CDG-2. The reason we estimated that this thing could be 99.94-99.98% dark matter is because of the GCs, since there’s a very well observed empirical relationship between a galaxy’s GC mass/number and the galaxy’s dark matter halo mass. This relationship is what we used to estimate the dark matter content of CDG-2. But still, to actually confirm the dark matter content, we once again need the kinematic and spectra of GCs in CDG-2. Lastly, for CDG-1, or what we call the twin of CDG-2, it was also made up of four GCs, but CDG-1 had absolutely no detectable faint light surrounding it like in CDG-2. That is why CDG-1 is still not confirmed because our current galaxy formation model simply would not support the existence of CDG-1. Put it in another way, if CDG-1 is indeed a galaxy, it will rewrite our understanding of how galaxies form. Our team have submitted multiple proposals to observe CDG-1, but they were all denied because the proposals were deemed too risky. But now with the discovery of CDG-2, we may have a better idea on what CDG-1 could be. If CDG-1 is confirmed to be a system of four self rotating GCs, that would literally change the game because CDG-1 will be the literal definition or poster child of Dark Galaxy.

1.4k 98 replies
@mahtoaitken4539 2026-03-02

Galaxy has not been unlocked as a playable character yet 😂 Thank you Anton for providing these videos. You are one of my favorites to see every day and I can't help but share them with anyone that I can. You're wonderful and you're appreciated!

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@creativedesignation7880 2026-03-02

It is so wild to me that just within my lifetime Dark Matter went from being an extremely fringe theory that some people even doubted could qualify as a theory, because it might be imposible to disprove, to something that was regarded to be probably a calculation error, to something that has a credible canditate of (almost) an entire galaxy being made of it.

21 1 replies
@koriko88 2026-03-01

I know I put that galaxy somewhere!

36 1 replies
@Samiaint 2026-03-01

5:13 am i the only one that can see a faint triangle in the circled region

110 39 replies
@chandreshmakesstuff 2026-03-05

Thanks, Anton. It's heartening to see the cosmologists that are your fans, engaging directly in the comments.

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@Samiaint 2026-03-01

8:42 "galaxy stripped of everything " i resemble that remark

20 1 replies
@GREFOUNDRY 2026-03-05

Congratulations to David Li and the team — amazing result. The 1.50×10⁻⁵ probability plus the faint diffuse structure seen in Hubble, Euclid and Subaru data makes CDG-2 a very compelling galaxy candidate. From an RTRT angle this kind of system is interesting because the baryonic domain is Nyquist-limited. If parts of the underlying dynamics evolve faster than that sampling rate, they don’t show up as luminous structure and only appear through gravitational effects. In a system like CDG-2 where almost all baryons are gone, the globular clusters become slow tracer particles mapping the potential well. Really looking forward to the JWST GC kinematics, because once their velocities are measured we’ll finally know if the clusters are dynamically bound and what the true halo mass is.

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@jakubp.6987 2026-03-01

Is in Dark galaxy Dark star with Dark planet orbiting it and Dark aliens living on it, observing universe and wondering if life can exist in Light galaxies?

27 3 replies
@nicholas8193 2026-03-28

Keep up the great work Anton, and how cool that one of the authors of the paper mentioned left a comment!

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