Among her fellow astronomers, Vera Rubin is known as an expert observer of the night sky, one of the best. Her reputation derives from the project she has doggedly pursued through most of her career: measuring how (1) ______ fast spiral galaxies are spinning, from their luminous cores out of the faint (2) ______ wisps of light at their fringes. Such a task may sound tedious; even her colleagues thought so when she started the project 20 years ago. But for her (3) ______ painstaking measurements Rubin has learned something important about galaxies: they spin so fast they have to fly apart. Since galaxies do not seem (4) ______ to be shedding stars the way like a rotating lawn sprinkler shed water; (5) ______ moreover, something must be holding the stars in. That something has to be (6) ______ gravity, no other force is powerful enough on a galactic scale. And where (7) ______ there is gravity, there is mass. Rubin realized that a huge reservoir Of extra materials, invisible to her telescope, must be tucked away somewhere in each (8) ______ galaxy. We cannot see this matter—it is invisible to all our detectors. But this "dark matter" seems to make up at least 90 percent of the mass of the universe, Large because of Rubia’s work, dark matter has become the buzzword in (9) ______ Astronomy. Her work has stirred Such ferment that observers are desperate to (10) ______ find some way of seeing dark matter and theorists are desperate to find an explanation of what it is—swarms of unknown elementary particles, for instance, hidden armadas of Jupiter-like planets.