While classic spiral and elliptical galaxies shine brightly, another class of galaxy flies under the radar. A recent study uses a new technique to search for galaxies so faint they are nearly completely dark.
Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies
Hard to see and harder to understand, ultra-diffuse galaxies are a galaxy class with extremely low surface brightness. With low luminosities but large physical extents, these galaxies appear as barely visible smudges, making them difficult to detect. Historically, astronomers have searched for ultra-diffuse galaxies using methods that search for diffuse stellar light; however, this method only catches those bright enough to spot — if even darker galaxies exist, they will not be found this way. Is there another way to discover these elusive galaxies?
Recent studies have shown that ultra-diffuse galaxies tend to have more globular clusters on average than typical galaxies. While this raises questions surrounding their formation and evolution, the abundance of globular clusters provides another way to search for ultra-diffuse galaxies. In general, globular clusters do not clump together in space unless there is additional mass, like dark matter, pulling them together. Thus, searching for overdensities of globular clusters could reveal a hidden population of ultra-diffuse galaxies.
Candidate Confirmation
Discovered as an overdensity of three globular clusters, Candidate Dark Galaxy-2 (CDG-2) was found in data from a Hubble Space Telescope (HST) program aimed at imaging the Perseus galaxy cluster. With an updated globular cluster catalog and improved statistical method for detecting overdensities, Dayi (David) Li (University of Toronto) and collaborators perform a follow-up search and analysis to confirm CDG-2 as a galaxy. Their method searches for clustering of globular clusters that do not appear to belong to any bright galaxy and are unlikely to be randomly grouped so closely in the intergalactic medium.

Euclid images of CDG-2 showing the four identified globular clusters (blue circles) and the faint diffuse emission (orange circles) associated with the galaxy. Click to enlarge. [Modified from Li et al 2025]
Globular Cluster and Dark Matter Dominated

Plot showing globular cluster total luminosity versus total galaxy luminosity for multiple galaxies. CDG-2 falls along the line corresponding to 16% of the total galaxy light coming from globular clusters. Click to enlarge. [Li et al 2025]
Through this study, the authors have confirmed the first galaxy ever detected solely through its globular cluster population. This technique opens a promising avenue to discovering more galaxies hiding out in the dark.
Citation
“Candidate Dark Galaxy-2: Validation and Analysis of an Almost Dark Galaxy in the Perseus Cluster,” Dayi (David) Li et al 2025 ApJL 986 L18. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/adddab