These researchers flew a particle detector above Antarctica, hoping to find evidence of mysterious matter

By Noah Lloyd January 27, 2026
A large cube-shaped particle detector is being lifted by a crane onto a truck on the Antarctic ice, with solar panels visible on its sides under a clear blue sky.

A cube, 13 feet to a side, lifts off a sheet of Antarctic ice. It’s tethered to a huge weather balloon filled with helium. Inside that cube is a highly advanced particle detector, designed to record the presence of exotic particles (antiparticles, to be precise) that careen toward Earth from deep space.

The balloon carrying the particle detector recently flew into the stratosphere to search for evidence of dark matter. 

This project, called the General Antiparticle Spectrometer, has been under development for over 20 years. Its results should give scientists a peek into how dark matter does — or doesn’t — function. It has taken one professor 20 years to reach this point.

Read more at Northeastern Global News

Photo by Florian Gahbauer

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