Although dark matter outnumber particles of regular matter by more than a factor of 10, they are elusive, researchers said.
Their existence is inferred by their gravitational influence in galaxies, but no one has ever directly observed signals from dark matter.
Triangulum II is a small, faint galaxy at the edge of the Milky Way, made up of only about 1,000 stars.
Evan Kirby, Assistant Professor of Astronomy at the California Institute of Technology measured the mass of Triangulum II by examining the velocity of six stars whipping around the galaxy's centre.
By measuring these stars' velocity, Kirby could infer the gravitational force exerted on the stars and thereby determine the mass of the galaxy.
"The total mass I measured was much, much greater than the mass of the total number of stars - implying that there's a tonne of densely packed dark matter contributing to the total mass," Kirby said.
"The ratio of dark matter to luminous matter is the highest of any galaxy we know," Kirby said.
Certain particles of dark matter, called supersymmetric WIMPs (weakly interacting massive particles), will annihilate one another upon colliding and produce gamma rays that can then be detected from Earth.
While current theories predict that dark matter is producing gamma rays almost everywhere in the universe, detecting these particular signals among other galactic noises, like gamma rays emitted from pulsars, is a challenge.
Triangulum II, on the other hand, is a very quiet galaxy. It lacks the gas and other material necessary to form stars, so it is not forming new stars - astronomers call it "dead."
It has not been definitively confirmed, though, that what Kirby measured is actually the total mass of the galaxy.
Another group, led by researchers from the University of Strasbourg in France, measured the velocities of stars just outside Triangulum II and found that they are actually moving faster than the stars closer into the galaxy's centre - the opposite of what is expected.
This could suggest that the little galaxy is being pulled apart, or "tidally disrupted," by the Milky Way's gravity.
"My next steps are to make measurements to confirm that other group's findings," Kirby said.
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