Astronomers using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have produced one of the most detailed, high-resolution maps yet of dark matter, the invisible material believed to shape how galaxies form and grow. The new work uses Webb’s sharp vision to trace where dark matter sits by measuring how its gravity subtly bends light from faraway galaxies.
The map was published Monday, Jan. 26, in the journal Nature Astronomy. It focuses on a well-studied patch of sky in the constellation Sextans, part of the long-running Cosmic Evolution Survey that combines observations from many telescopes.
How Webb “sees” the invisible
Dark matter can’t be photographed directly because it does not emit, reflect, absorb, or block light. Scientists instead look for its effects on gravity—specifically how mass warps space and bends the path of light.
In this research, the team measured tiny distortions in the shapes of distant galaxies. This effect, called gravitational lensing, works like viewing the universe through uneven glass: the foreground mass changes how background galaxies appear, revealing where dark matter must be and how strongly it is pulling.
Researchers involved in the work said the results show dark matter is not scattered randomly. Instead, it appears closely aligned with “regular” matter—the material that makes stars, galaxies, and everything we can see—suggesting the two have been linked throughout cosmic history.
The COSMOS region in sharper detail
The mapped area covers a section of sky about 2.5 times the width of the full Moon as seen from Earth. Scientists have observed this region repeatedly for years with ground- and space-based telescopes to measure the distribution of regular matter and compare it with the distribution of dark matter.
Webb observed the region for a total of about 255 hours. In NASA’s account, Webb identified nearly 800,000 galaxies in the field, including some detected for the first time. Euronews’ report describes the new map as identifying around a million galaxies, and also says this is about twice the number of the deepest survey previously obtained by the Hubble Space Telescope.
The Webb-based map is described as both larger and sharper than earlier dark matter maps of the same region. NASA and Phys.org report that it includes about 10 times more galaxies than maps made by ground-based observatories and twice as many as Hubble’s, helping researchers see new clumps of dark matter and a higher-resolution view of structures previously observed.
Why the new map matters
Scientists think that when the universe began, both regular matter and dark matter were spread out thinly. In NASA’s explanation, dark matter likely clumped together first, and those clumps then pulled in regular matter, creating dense regions where stars and galaxies could begin forming.
That idea matters because it links dark matter to the large-scale structure of the universe—how galaxies are arranged across enormous distances. NASA also says dark matter’s early influence may have helped create conditions that eventually allowed planets like Earth to form, because earlier star formation would have given more time for stars to build heavier elements from hydrogen and helium.
Researchers quoted in the reports emphasize the tight connection between dark matter and regular matter in the new map. One scientist said that where researchers see large clusters of galaxies, they also see massive amounts of dark matter in the same places—and where they see thin bridges of regular matter between clusters, they also see dark matter connecting them.
What comes next for dark matter mapping
Researchers described the Sextans patch as an important reference point for future surveys. New and upcoming observatories are expected to map dark matter across far larger areas of the sky, even if they cannot always match Webb’s spatial resolution.
NASA points to plans for the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope to map dark matter over an area far bigger than the COSMOS region. Euronews also mentions the European Space Agency’s Euclid telescope and NASA’s Roman mission as future observatories designed to chart dark matter across wider cosmic regions.
The team also used Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) to help refine distance measurements for many galaxies in the map. NASA notes that MIRI’s wavelengths are useful for finding galaxies hidden behind cosmic dust, improving the depth and reliability of the underlying galaxy data used to trace dark matter.
