Theory Posits Early Stars Powered By Dark Matter 115
ethericalzen writes "A BBC article highlights a theory that the first stars may have been powered by dark matter. A group of US scientists published a paper in Physical Review Letters speculating that, unlike the stars of today, which are powered by nuclear fusion, early stars might have been powered by the abundant dark matter crowding the universe after the Big Bang. The theory suggests that these stars would have collided and destroyed one another before nuclear fusion had a chance take hold." The BBC perhaps overstates the certainty with which the dark-matter theory is held, and doesn't mention that the postulated properties of such particles are completely speculative.
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How can something so dark create so much light...
First off, dark matter isn't dark but transparent. Then, how could say methane and oxygen which are transparent create light when burning together? Oh I know! Maybe that's because it's not the matter that releases light/energy but its transformation.
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Re:Light from nothing? (Score:5, Funny)
Didn't see it coming?
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And heat them up to stellar temperatures, and see what colors theyy glow!
Re:Light from nothing? (Score:5, Funny)
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Dark Stars? (Score:3, Funny)
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I cannot believe... (Score:2)
Overstates? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Overstates? (Score:5, Informative)
> alternatives were that there's more interstellar dust than we thought...
That doesn't work because you can't get the observed distribution with baryonic matter.
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Really? Not one clue, about anything? I think that would be presumptuous in the other extreme.
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In other words, "Math is hard, let's go shopping."
How about: "These particular results of the use of Math do not really make sense, and we cannot really verify/falsify them. It's fun, but right now I have to do some shopping, so I'll go build a bridge or do something for which I can get paid, and with the money I get I'll buy that second-hand Cray you saw yesterday and we'll be back in the business of discovering particles that are so small that, if Heisenberg was right, we can't know much about them but a product of their speed and of their mass, or bac
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Most of the theory right now revolves around our solar system and what occurs there. We have a whole set of formulas to calculate it.
But those formulas fall apart when applied to the very small such as an atom so we make exceptions.
Each planet rotates a given speed based upon its distance from the sun, yet electrons do not follow that same calculation around the proton.
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And that, of course, is for a very good reason: the electrons aren't in orbit around the nucleus in the same way that the Earth is in orbit around the Sun. If they were, electro-magnetic attraction would pull them into direct contact almost instantly.
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Re:Overstates? (Score:5, Funny)
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Hyperspace coordinates are eminently helpful in, e.g., nuclear theory, but there are mappings from these to 4-space, and I am unaware if anyone thinks that the transformations are merely convenient ways to separate out e
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Actually, it seems to me that the universe expanding completely uniformly in higher dimensions than what is visible would still explain all of the non-uniform expansion that dark matter was apparently invented to explain. It baffles me as to why they would invent the notion of something invisible to explain anomalous observations instead of going with a no less workable and radically simpler theory.
How do you test for "the universe expanding completely uniformly in higher dimensions"?
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Dark energy has been invented to explain why the expansion of the Universe is speeding up.
Dark matter is to explain why galaxies stay together without having enough observable mass.
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Actually, it seems to me that the universe expanding completely uniformly in higher dimensions than what is visible would still explain all of the non-uniform expansion that dark matter was apparently invented to explain.
We don't really observe non-uniform expansion ... we do see random inhomogeneities left over in the current distribution of cosmic background radiation and galaxies, thought to be partly due to inflation and partly to dark matter.
Adding higher dimensions isn't going to explain that unless you postulate randomly lumpy extra dimensions; otherwise, smooth extra dimensions aren't going to project down to something random in lower dimensions.
And it's not just the expansion of space that you have to explain. It
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Re:Overstates? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Another analogy for dark matter is the neutrino: it was an invisible, virtually non-interacting particle introduced purely to maintain the internal consistency of the known laws of physics (the conservation laws). It was 12 years before they were actually discovered, since they interact so weakly. Dark matter also interacts weakly, but is thought to be much more massive than a neutrino, so it's difficult to produce in a particle accelerator.
Dark Matter is a good concept, but (Score:2)
There is nothing wrong with Dark Matter(DM) as a concept. It is certainly possible that DM exists. The only problem with DM (at least at the Galactic scale) is that MOND gives very good results. Its like the Max Planck's corpuscular theory of Black Body Radiation. Planck assumed that radiation could only have some allowed energy levels. This assumption was able to fit the Black Body Radiation curve very well. This is how Quantum theory was born.
Now MOND is similar i
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for the fact that MOND gives good results.
But MOND doesn't give good results, except for galactic rotation curves, which are by far not the only evidence for dark matter.
DM at galactic scale would be perfectly fine if we did not have MOND work so well.
DM at galactic scale is still perfectly fine, regardless of the existence of MOND or any other theory. Whether theory Y also explains observations has nothing to do with how well theory X explains those observations. (Well, unless you propose they're both true, instead of being competing.)
If all we had were galactic rotation curves, then DM and MOND would both be fine. Of cour
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I did not say that MOND requires curved space. Just that it could explain MOND.
There are curved spacetime theories of MOND, but their existence does not follow from what you say below.
Mass curves space-time and this curvature exerts a force, we know as gravitational force. If the space-time that makes up universe is itself curved say because of the expansion, then that curvature will itself create a force. Which will manifest itself as a force occurring without any matter.
Not necessarily. Take general relativity without a cosmological constant. It admits curved, expanding spacetimes, but it can't replace dark matter. You have to make more radical changes to the dynamics of spacetime to do that. (In TeVeS theory, you need to have extra scalar and vector fields in addition to the usual tensor field of gravity.)
This force will tend to force objects into rotational motion.
That doesn't follow, and indeed, is unlikely assuming lo
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How do you overstate the certainty of dark matter? Last I read, the only serious alternatives were that there's more interstellar dust than we thought (improbable considering the observations of the bending of light), modifications to the theory of gravity (few supporters, unlikely, especially with said observations), and string theory.
I think kdawson meant that they were overstating the certainty of this theory, not the existence of dark matter in general. To be honest, I'm not sure why there are so many people (at least on /.) who want to relegate dark matter the the mathematical physics bin along with string theory. There's plenty of evidence for it. We've even observed gravitational lensing from dark matter. Dark energy [wikipedia.org] on the other hand, may be something of a luminiferous aether [wikipedia.org].
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That's as logical as God (Score:1, Flamebait)
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"...if only they had observed dark matter..." (Score:2)
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What? (Score:2)
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With all these uncertainties I think it's jumping the gun to assume any gravitational effects we can't explain with our models of the univers
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Thanks, kdawson (Score:5, Funny)
sure they were (Score:2, Funny)
Guess what! (Score:2)
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I had this idea that if you take the early universe, place it in a top loading washer and set the dial to spin, then press start, wouldn't you get accelerating expansion? I just Googled this an apparently it's an old idea. Of course, you need a extra-dimensional washer but I'll leave string/brane theory to explain all this. Fits in well with bubble/suds universes too.
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Maybe a better word (Score:1)
Its use of "theory" like this that give the mouth breathers down in Florida and excuse.
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The correct word is "hypothesis." Until it gets tested, and then it can be a theory.
(Obviously, we need a commercial-length, musical, animated short that explains how a hypothesis becomes a theory.)
Re:Maybe a better word (Score:5, Funny)
PC Guy: Hi, I'm a hypothesis.
Mac Guy: And I'm a theory.
PC Guy: Wait a second, how did you become a theory all of a sudden? What, you think you're special now?
Mac Guy: No, it's not that, P.C. I just got promoted because so many new people like me.
PC Guy: So because a lot of people like you...
Mac Guy: Well, and it also helps that I've been subject to a lot of scrutiny and they've concluded I'm not full of holes...
PC Guy: I resemble that remark....
Mac Guy: I know you do, P.C. And, of course, a preponderance of evidence confirms my correctness and robustness. That's one more reason that they made me a theory.
PC Guy: Preponderance of evidence... kind of like the O.J. Civil Trial, then?
Mac Guy: ...
PC Guy: ...
Mac Guy: Okay, I'm just going to have to go with "yes" and we'll call that your best hypothesis....
[Apple logo]
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I figured this out several years ago... (Score:5, Funny)
1. Nibblonian civilization [wikipedia.org] predates the Big Bang by 17 years.
2. Nibblonians poop dark matter.
Ergo, the first stars were made of Nibblonian poop.
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Very Very Dark Matter (Score:1, Redundant)
Re: Very Very Dark Matter (Score:5, Informative)
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karma: neutral
Re: Very Very Dark Matter (Score:5, Informative)
Dark Matter was just one hypothesis among many for why galaxy rotation wasn't as expected until we started getting the very precise measurements of the cosmic microwave background radiation a couple of years ago. That made it clear that the matter mass of the early universe was about 80% non-baryonic, reacting to gravity but not light pressure. The percentage and distribution was predicted well by a dark matter theory, and it has explained some later observations as well.
Michigan researchers (Score:1, Flamebait)
similar research is going on in florida
Are they still stars? (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, a tennis ball and a "tennis-ball-shaped" object made of iron are two very different objects. I know which one I would like to have hit me in the head.
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Dark matter stars are made of the same stuff as regular stars (hydrogen and helium) except they have a bunch of dark matter in them too, that may have interesting effects.
You wouldn't call the sun not-a-star because it also has heavier elements than helium in it, would you?
Dark matter is an optimization? (Score:5, Interesting)
If this was a simulation, would you simulate very atom? Or would you bulk compute matter that was less important, until it became important then simulate every atom?
Could dark matter, or matter we have trouble seeing, be the equivalent of hiding polygons which don't need to be rendered in a 3D scene?
Geez, I hope not. Quick, prove me wrong.
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You can't get your galaxies to meet project specs, so you fudge your algorithm and hope the teacher doesn't notice.
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For all you know the universe was created this morning and you just think you remember everything prior.
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vaudeville killed the minstrel show star (Score:2)
Star Power (Score:2)
Speculation is not a theory (Score:1)
Just how weakly... (Score:1)
How weakly do Weakly Interacting Massive Particles interact? Now we have them colliding and annihilating themselves? Often enough to create enough pressure to offset the gravity trying to pull the "star" together? Just how wimpy are your WIMPs?
And I also am not convinced these hypothetical objects should be called "stars." Quark stars and neutron stars were at least formerly fusion-powered stars before losing their morals and becoming degenerate matter.
Re:Your tax dollars funded this, but no article (Score:5, Informative)
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more of the rabbit hole (Score:1)
As the astronomers equipment gets better, so it will be that science will have to change the reasons behind what it is seeing. Look for postulates of dark energy/matter (multidimensional areas in space), and also postulates of light changing its speed from place to place, depending upon the formula around localized reality, especially the time frame.
This will create new insight as how the Universe is moving.
As we approach t
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