The quiet glow of computer monitors fills the control rooms at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena late at night. Outside, the desert air is cool and still. Inside, astronomers zoom in on galaxies that formed billions of years ago by scrolling through pictures taken with the James Webb Space Telescope. The pictures are stunning, almost eerie. Not because of what they display, but rather because of what they subtly disclose. Dark matter.
It’s difficult to describe how bizarre the concept is. It seems that about 85% of the universe’s matter is invisible, neither reflecting nor emitting light. It cannot be directly photographed by astronomers. By observing how galaxies bend light and pull on one another over unfathomable distances, they are only able to deduce its existence through gravity.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Telescope | James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) |
| Mission Lead | NASA in partnership with ESA and CSA |
| Observation Region | COSMOS Field in the constellation Sextans |
| Observation Time | About 255 hours of deep observation |
| Galaxies Observed | Nearly 800,000 galaxies |
| Mapping Technique | Weak gravitational lensing |
| Instrument Used | Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) |
| Scientific Goal | Mapping dark matter distribution and cosmic structure |
| Key Institutions | Durham University, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, EPFL |
| Reference | https://science.nasa.gov/webb |
The universe appeared to conceal this structure well for decades. Then Webb showed up.
The telescope was launched in 2021 and is currently in orbit around a million miles from Earth. Its mirrors capture faint infrared light that started coming toward us soon after the Big Bang, allowing it to gaze into deep cosmic time. The COSMOS field, a region of the sky about 2.5 times larger than the full Moon, is the subject of the most recent observations. Really, just a small portion of the sky. However, the data showed that there were almost 800,000 galaxies.
There’s a feeling of silent incredulity as astronomers study the pictures. The galaxies, which could each contain billions of stars, are dispersed like grains of sand across the screen. The invisible scaffolding that keeps the whole thing together is somewhere among them, concealed in the laws of gravity.
The most comprehensive map of dark matter ever created was created by scientists using Webb’s data. It also narrates an intriguing tale.
Dark matter seems to have clumped together long before stars ignited or planets formed. It was drawn into filaments that stretched across space by gravity, which cosmologists frequently refer to as the “cosmic web.” Like iron filings sliding toward a magnet, ordinary matter—the kind that eventually gave rise to galaxies and humans—followed those gravitational trails.
The pattern becomes strangely obvious when one looks at the map. Like beads on threads, galaxies align along invisible strands. It’s hard not to stop there for a second, gazing at the picture and understanding that the majority of the universe’s structure is based on something that we are still unable to see.
The method used to make the discovery is subtle. Gravitational lensing, a phenomenon predicted by Einstein’s theory of relativity, is used by scientists. Light from far-off galaxies is slightly distorted as it approaches Earth due to massive objects bending space itself. Those distortions are small—almost imperceptible—but when astronomers measure thousands of galaxies at once, the pattern reveals where dark matter must be lurking.
This type of mapping was previously attempted by earlier telescopes. The same COSMOS field was even examined by the Hubble Space Telescope almost twenty years ago. However, Webb’s solution completely alters the experience. Dense pockets of dark matter that were overlooked by previous surveys are now visible.
Whether this will ultimately resolve the dark matter mystery is still up for debate. Galaxies behave as though they are surrounded by massive, invisible mass, which is how scientists know it exists. Without it, our own Milky Way would most likely explode. However, one of physics’ most enduring mysteries is what dark matter actually is—a particle, a field, or something else entirely. The astronomy community believes that Webb’s map is more of a starting point than a solution.
The next generation of surveys is already being discussed by some researchers. Currently in development, the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is anticipated to map dark matter across billions of galaxies by scanning vast swaths of the sky. In the meantime, data intended to measure dark matter and dark energy on cosmic scales is already being collected by Europe’s Euclid Space Telescope.
It’s difficult not to notice a subtle change in perspective when you stand back from all of this.
For centuries, people looked up at the night sky and thought the stars told the story. However, astronomers are starting to suspect that the bright galaxies we admire are merely decorations, hints of a deeper force sculpting the universe from the shadows.
It’s possible that the true architecture is invisible. And now, slowly, that hidden architecture is starting to emerge thanks to a telescope that is floating far beyond Earth.

