MACHOs may sometimes be considered to include
black holes. Isolated black holes without any matter around them are truly black in that they emit no light and any light shone upon them is absorbed and not reflected. A black hole can sometimes be detected by the halo of bright gas and dust that forms around it as an
accretion disk being pulled in by the black hole's gravity. Such a disk can generate jets of gas that are shot out away from the black hole because it cannot be absorbed quickly enough. An isolated black hole, however, would not have an accretion disk and would only be detectable by gravitational lensing. Cosmologists doubt non-
direct collapse black holes make up a majority of dark matter because the black holes are at isolated points of the galaxy. The largest contributor to the missing mass must be spread throughout the galaxy to balance the gravity. A minority of physicists, including
Chapline and
Laughlin, believe that the widely accepted model of the black hole is wrong and needs to be replaced by a new model, the
dark-energy star; in the general case for the suggested new model, the cosmological distribution of
dark energy would be slightly lumpy and dark-energy stars of primordial type might be a possible candidate for MACHOs.
Neutron stars, unlike black holes, are not heavy enough to collapse completely, and instead form a material rather like that of an
atomic nucleus called
neutron matter. After sufficient time these stars could radiate away enough energy to become cold enough that they would be too faint to see. Likewise, old
white dwarfs may also become cold and dead, eventually becoming
black dwarfs, although the
universe is not thought to be
old enough for any stars to have reached this stage.
Brown dwarfs have also been proposed as MACHO candidates. Brown dwarfs are sometimes called "failed stars" as they do not have enough mass for nuclear fusion to begin once their gravity causes them to collapse. Brown dwarfs are about thirteen to seventy-five times the mass of Jupiter. The contraction of material forming the brown dwarf heats them up so they only glow feebly at infrared wavelengths, making them difficult to detect. A survey of
gravitational lensing effects in the direction of the
Small Magellanic Cloud and
Large Magellanic Cloud did not detect the number and type of lensing events expected if brown dwarfs made up a significant fraction of dark matter. ==Theoretical considerations==