Dark Matter finally identified..it's not Hydrinos User UnpoliticalPenguin, in the We have moved to /r/hydrino subreddit, 07 Mar 2020
Scientists have identified a sub-atomic particle that could have formed the "dark matter" in the Universe during the Big Bang. Nuclear physicists at the University of York are putting forward a new candidate for the mysterious matter—a particle they recently discovered called the d-star hexaquark. User worldnewsbot, in the News From Around The World subreddit, 04 Mar 2020
Scientists have identified a sub-atomic particle that could have formed the "dark matter" in the Universe during the Big Bang. Nuclear physicists at the University of York are putting forward a new candidate for the mysterious matter—a particle they recently discovered called the d-star hexaquark. User pewpepaw, 04 Mar 2020
A new possibility for light-quark dark matter User John_Hasler, in the Physics subreddit, 04 Mar 2020
Scientists have identified a sub-atomic particle that could have formed the "dark matter" in the Universe during the Big Bang. Nuclear physicists at the University of York are putting forward a new candidate for the mysterious matter—a particle they recently discovered called the d-star hexaquark. User chengbogdani, in the midden subreddit, 03 Mar 2020
Scientists have identified a sub-atomic particle that could have formed the "dark matter" in the Universe during the Big Bang. Nuclear physicists at the University of York are putting forward a new candidate for the mysterious matter—a particle they recently discovered called the d-star hexaquark. User MistWeaver80, in the Reddit Science subreddit, 03 Mar 2020