Researchers, including those from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Yale Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics in the US, analysed the energy spectrum of X-rays.
They found more X-ray photons with a particular energy than would be expected if they were produced only by familiar processes.
Those photons could in fact have been generated by the decay of dark matter particles, say the researchers.
This is not the first time that scientists have seen extra photons with an energy of about 3,500 electronvolts in the spectra recorded by X-ray satellites.
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Scientists reckon that dark matter makes up more than 80 per cent of all the mass in the universe.
As its name suggests, it gives off no light, but reveals its presence through the gravitational tug it exerts on stars within galaxies.
For years, physicists have been trying to detect particles of dark matter directly by intercepting them using instruments on Earth.
The latest research, carried out by Nico Cappelluti at Yale, targets relatively light particles of dark matter, 'BBC News' reported.
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