Stars, bioluminescent organisms, and reflective surfaces like mirrors can shine in the dark.
Stars, gas, and dust are all categorized as visible matter, not "dark" matter, but, since dark matter does not interact electromagnetically, the behavior of ordinary matter is used to study dark matter through their gravitational effects. You might say that stars, gas, and dust are like the leaves blowing in an invisible wind; the force can be perceived by the effects on the leaves even if you can't see the wind directly.
Fire.
Dark matter is by definition not visible nor reactive to the electromagnetic force; this would exclude visible matter, including stars. One might argue that the effects which dark matter has been used to explain could be consequential to gravitational pull from ordinary stars, perhaps owing to a gross miscalculation or an incomplete understanding of gravitational force -- but this would be a different position than to say dark matter itself is stellar material.
The only similarity we know of is that they all seem to interact with gravity. Aside from that, scientists do not know what dark matter is.
The Dark Beyond the Stars was created in 1991.
The Dark Beyond the Stars has 408 pages.
The ISBN of The Dark Beyond the Stars is 0-312-86624-0.
Dark Stars - 2003 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-PG
The cast of Dark Stars - 2003 includes: Phil Spector
very dark no lights around
Dark Enough to See the Stars in a Jamestown Sky was created in 2006.
Dark Stars - 2003 Linda Darnell was released on: USA: 2005
The cast of The Dark Between the Stars - 2010 includes: Jason Brooks
It is only dark enough to can see the stars if there is no light pollution. Light causes obstruction in view.
Roger Ebert gave The Dark Knight Rises 3 out of 4 stars.
Place of No Stars. (Dark Forest)