To Explain Away Dark Matter, Gravity Would Have To Be Really Weird (sciencemag.org) 198
To discard the theory of dark matter, "you'll need to replace it with something even more bizarre: a force of gravity that, at some distances, pulls massive objects together and, at other distances, pushes them apart." That's how Science magazine describes a new study, adding that "The analysis underscores how hard it is to explain away dark matter" — even though "after decades of trying, physicists haven't spotted particles of dark matter floating around."
[T]o do away with dark matter, theorists would also need explain away its effects on much larger, cosmological scales. And that is much harder, argues Kris Pardo, a cosmologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and David Spergel, a cosmologist at Princeton University. To make their case, they compare the distribution of ordinary matter in the early universe as revealed by measurements of the afterglow of the big bang — the cosmic microwave background (CMB) — with the distribution of the galaxies today....
Pardo and Spergel derived a mathematical function that describes how gravity would have had to work to get from the distribution of ordinary matter revealed by the CMB to the current distribution of the galaxies. They found something striking: That function must swing between positive and negative values, meaning gravity would be attractive at some length scales and repulsive at others, Pardo and Spergel report this week in Physical Review Letters. "And that's superweird," Pardo says...
In a paper posted in June to the preprint server arXiv, theoretical cosmologists Constantinos Skordis and Tom Zlosnik of the Czech Academy of Sciences present a dark matter-less theory of modified gravity they say jibes with CMB data. To do that, researchers add to a theory like general relativity an additional, tunable field called a scalar field. It has energy, and through Einstein's equivalence of mass and energy, it can behave like a form of mass. Set things up just right and at large spatial scales, the scalar field interacts only with itself and acts like dark matter...
Skordis's and Zlosnik's paper is "very exciting," Pardo says. But he notes that in some sense it merely replaces one mysterious thing — dark matter — with another — a carefully tuned scalar field. Given the complications, Pardo says, "dark matter is kind of the easier explanation."
Pardo and Spergel derived a mathematical function that describes how gravity would have had to work to get from the distribution of ordinary matter revealed by the CMB to the current distribution of the galaxies. They found something striking: That function must swing between positive and negative values, meaning gravity would be attractive at some length scales and repulsive at others, Pardo and Spergel report this week in Physical Review Letters. "And that's superweird," Pardo says...
In a paper posted in June to the preprint server arXiv, theoretical cosmologists Constantinos Skordis and Tom Zlosnik of the Czech Academy of Sciences present a dark matter-less theory of modified gravity they say jibes with CMB data. To do that, researchers add to a theory like general relativity an additional, tunable field called a scalar field. It has energy, and through Einstein's equivalence of mass and energy, it can behave like a form of mass. Set things up just right and at large spatial scales, the scalar field interacts only with itself and acts like dark matter...
Skordis's and Zlosnik's paper is "very exciting," Pardo says. But he notes that in some sense it merely replaces one mysterious thing — dark matter — with another — a carefully tuned scalar field. Given the complications, Pardo says, "dark matter is kind of the easier explanation."
OTOH, dark energy? (Score:2)
It sound's like the "really weird" theory of gravity they're proposing (bounds for) could explain away dark energy as well as dark matter. So it might be a simpler model. And it looks like ANY theory is going to need to be finely tuned to explain the results...including dark matter and dark energy.
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But have they considered the involvement of other forces? Like electric charges?
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But have they considered the involvement of other forces? Like electric charges?
[... insert "your mama" joke here ...]
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But have they considered the involvement of other forces? Like electric charges?
Seriously now, do you really think that no one has thought about the other long distance fundamental force?
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It doesn't explain even a small portion of what Relativity does, and the few things it predicts have been show to be wrong. The earth is not 6000 years old, the grand canyon was made through erosion (not giant ass lightning bolts from space), the sun isn't an electric monopole, and there are no massive steams of electricity bouncing between stars. Oh, and EVERY experiment so far has show EINSTEIN WAS RIGHT, and for the e
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Yes. It isn't relevant.
Electricity has none of the required properties, and doesn't interact with gravity much, other than the very slight amount of mass present in an electrons resting mass
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Yes. We call it dark matter specifically because we KNOW it doesn't interact electrically. If it did, it would affect (and be affected by) light passing through it.
Basically, at a human+ scales there's really only two forces, gravity, and electrostatics. And anything that interacts with electric fields is visible.
Electrostatics includes all physical contact (electrostatic repulsion of the electron clouds around atoms), magnetism (which can supposedly be understood as electrostatics under the transformati
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I was going to post pretty much exactly this.
Between dark energy and ordinary gravity, two comoving objects in an otherwise empty universe will inertially drift toward each other if they're below a certain distance apart, and away from each other if they're above that distance apart. (And sit stationary at exactly that distance, with the attractive or repulsive forces ramping up continually as they get further from that exact distance apart).
That sounds like it could very well be accounted for by a single f
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At the turn of the nineteench century theorists were trying to explain away the uniformity of light velocity, independent of the observer. Then somebody came up with a really weird explanation called relativity which turned out to be correct.
Missing the point (Score:5, Insightful)
It sound's like the "really weird" theory of gravity they're proposing...
They are not proposing it: they are saying that if you get rid of Dark Matter you end up with a really weird theory of gravity. The point is that the theory is so weird that it is hard to believe it is at all possible in which case we need some form of Dark Matter along with a normal theory of gravity.
It's like Schrodinger's cat. That was a thought experiment designed to show that the Copenhagen interpretation of Quantum Mechanics was seriously flawed. No physicist believes that the cat is in some weird superposition of alive+dead: the intent was that it was such an absurd idea that it would make people look for better explanations. Sadly, it seems to have failed and now those who do not know any better hold it up as a supposed example of how QM works!
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IDK about dark energy but dark matter is to a degree proven, at least with regards to behaviour.
https://www.nasa.gov/home/hqne... [nasa.gov]
So, any weird gravity theory will have to explain this event.
Maybe dark matter causes gravity as an emergent phenomenon from the c
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They are not proposing it: they are saying that if you get rid of Dark Matter you end up with a really weird theory of gravity.
I don't know, I think I'd find "gravity gets weird at large distances" to be more realistically probable and worth exploring, than trying to find a ghost of a particle in my data that I invented because nothing else makes sense.
It seems just as feasible to me that the gravitational field (in a quantum sense), does weird stuff at galactic distances. I sometimes joke with my more science minded friends that "dark matter" could just be a "rounding error" in the universe. Maybe this bonkers idea that gravity/th
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Re:OTOH, dark energy? (Score:5, Insightful)
there is magically none in the Solar system or even the local Milky Way.
Our universe, on average, has about one atom of ordinary matter per cubic meter.
Our atmosphere has about 1e25 atoms per cubic meter. Dark matter is supposedly less clumpy and doesn't concentrate like that.
The best vacuums that humans can produce contain trillions of atoms per cubic meter.
It is difficult to pick a few particles of dark matter out of those vast numbers of ordinary matter when they are weakly interacting and we don't even know what properties they have.
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I believe we can produce space-grade vacuums just by gettering with cryogenics on something sealed; a glass bulb plopped into liquid helium will contain a very good vacuum. The trouble is measuring and quantifying this vacuum without impacting it.
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Re:OTOH, dark energy? (Score:5, Informative)
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No Dark Energy though, it resides somewhere else.
The CMB-based guesstimate could be wrong (Score:2, Interesting)
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To make their case, they compare the distribution of ordinary matter in the early universe as revealed by measurements of the afterglow of the big bang - the cosmic microwave background (CMB) - with the distribution of the galaxies today...
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It could be they are wrong about "the distribution of ordinary matter in the early universe". If their idea about what the universe was like just after the Big Bang is inconsistent with gravity as we know it, it's possible that idea is wrong. Maybe gravity works the
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They are comparing to the CMB. This is not an assumption, this is data. We have seen the CMB. We have precise maps of it. Assuming we know the status of the universe at the time the CMB formed is not a hard thing to do in this context, as we DIRECTLY MEASURE IT.
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my beef with dark matter is that despite making up more than half of all matter in the Universe there is magically none in the Solar system or even the local Milky Way. Yeah sorry but that does not pass the sniff test, and as far as I am concerned with have another ether on our hands.
Not correct. The theory says that dark matter particles are passing right through you all the time, just like all the neutrinos that you also don't personally notice.
Re:OTOH, dark energy? (Score:4, Informative)
my beef with dark matter is that despite making up more than half of all matter in the Universe there is magically none in the Solar system or even the local Milky Way. Yeah sorry but that does not pass the sniff test, and as far as I am concerned with have another ether on our hands.
Not being able to detect something isn't the same as it not being there. We detect dark matter by the way it warps spacetime, what we colloquially call it's gravity, we can't see that at sub-galactic scales. Very likely we're in a soup of dark mater.
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Not being able to detect something isn't the same as it not being there.
Actually it is, If there are no direct or indirect methods of observation.
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It seems that we assume space-time is naturally flat, maybe on the larger scales it isn't, maybe the universe wouldn't even work if it was naturally flat. Maybe the universe is the way it is now as a result of it flattening out from a far more curved state.
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One of the evidences of dark matter is the local behavior of stars within the Milky Way. The orbital velocity of stars around the center doesn't match the expectation from the visible matter.
As for why it doesn't display noticeable result at the scale of the solar system, it's due to the extreme low density. There's on the order of a hydrogen of mass per cubic centimeter missing based on the missing mass that can be measured by observing our orbital velocity around the Milky Way's core. The easiest observat
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my beef with dark matter is that despite making up more than half of all matter in the Universe there is magically none in the Solar system or even the local Milky Way. Yeah sorry but that does not pass the sniff test, and as far as I am concerned with have another ether on our hands.
Your beef is not properly cooked. Charting the orbits of visible objects indicates that 95% of the Milky Way, including its halo, is Dark Matter [wikipedia.org].
Further it is in every part of the galaxy, including the Solar System. Like visible matter, it is densest in the galactic center, and drops off as you move outward.
The density is so low though we cannot construct experiments to detect it gravitationally locally. Most things in the Universe that we can detect are detectable by being extremely non-uniform and clumpy.
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> there is magically none in the Solar system
What makes you say that? As I understand it, current experimental constraints on the gravitational effects suggest the density in Earth's orbit could be as high as 90,000 proton masses per cc (1.4x10^-19g/cc)
We haven't been able to actually detect any - but we wouldn't realistically expect to. All we know about dark matter (assuming it exists) is that it doesn't interact with electromagnetic forces - including photons - which is pretty much the only way matte
If assumptions dont work, needs more assumptions . (Score:5, Funny)
But, after all these assumptions, sorry postulates produce absurd results like dark matter and dark energy, just make even more weird assumptions and be done with it. Based on logical reductio ad absurdum they should reject their original postulate that led to this absurd conclusion and accept the theory of intelligent falling. But they won't. They won't accept the tide goes in and out and the planets, the Sun and the Moon go around the Earth because God said so.
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All we are asking for is equal access to the minds of small children at impressionable age to present our theory to too. Theory of gravity, theory of intelligent falling, both should be in the science text book and let the third grader can make an informed decision about which one to believe. At a minimum there should be disclaimers and warnings about the Theory of Gravity, The theory of gravitation is only
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Uh, maybe you could give your satire detectors a tune up? They appear all tired and warn out.
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Actually, most really weird assumptions turn out to be somewhere between wrong and stupid, heavily weighted toward the stupid end. You're just looking at the very, very few that actually work.
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the Sun and the Moon go around the Earth because God said so.
Which one?
Re:If assumptions dont work, needs more assumption (Score:5, Informative)
OP is being sarcastic. "Intelligent Falling" was a parody used to counter the religious zealots that wanted "Intelligent Design" taught in schools.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligent_falling [wikipedia.org]
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One thing that a lot of people don't know is the link between Postmodernism and Intelligent Design, which isn't just some speculation, there's actually documentary evidence that the original thinkers behind ID were influenced by the so-called "strong-programme" of the sociology of science.
The strong programme does not distinguish between true or false scientific ideas; rather it looks at scientific orthodoxy as if it were any other orthodoxy -- a social construct used to enforce the power of an advantaged g
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I look at that statistic and see the opposite - an immense failing (or an immense success of anti-science if you prefer). If 2/3 are able to do so without restrictions, that means that 1/3 of public schools science teachers have such restrictions and must present Evolution with alternatives such as Intelligent Design.
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May be we this is how the colonized nations with great prior civilization, like Egypt, Ind
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Ah I see. Thanks for the link.
It's sometimes hard to recognize sarcasm when religious beliefs are involved. Earnest religious beliefs sometimes get even weirder than the ones that were posted sarcastically here.
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interesting idea (Score:2)
What about two forces? (Score:2)
This is probably going to sound like the rantings of someone who had too much pot (though I swear, I've never touched the stuff), but what if there's actually another force at play? Let's say in addition to gravity, all matter also emits a weak repulsive force that extends to much greater distances than gravity.
Imagine a toy drone with a strong neodymium magnet glued to the bottom. At close enough range, the magnet will overpower the thrust from the propellers and stick it to a metal surface, but as long
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Yes, people have been looking for such a thing for a while now especially after dark energy was detected.
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That is how we explained what keeps atomic nuclei together. Electromagnetism means that protons repel each other and it drops of as an inverse as the square of the distance. The strong-nuclear force is much stronger but drops off much faster with distance. Force the protons close enough and the SN force dominates and they stick together.
If a new force is responsible for the weird behavior of dark matter, then it would need to be a repulsive force that drops off faster than 1/r^2. So at large galaxy-scal
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When I read "To discard the theory of dark matter, "you'll need to replace it with something even more bizarre: a force of gravity that, at some distances, pulls massive objects together and, at other distances, pushes them apart." I also immediately thought "why not two forces"? We've found formerly undetected forces before, why not again?
I'm sure others have had the same thought, though, since they think about this a lot more than I do.
Not sure I understand (Score:2)
As there's not much direct evidence for dark matter, I don't understand this part: "[it is hard to] explain away dark matter". After all, dark matter is already the explaining away of observed discrepancies. So any alternative "explaining away" is equally legit, assuming it's no worse than dark matter, eg. doesn't require a lot of additional assumptions.
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So any alternative "explaining away" is equally legit
The problem is that, so far, all the alternatives fail to explain observed phenomena.
For instance, MACHOs and/or micro primordial black holes would produce gravitational lensing that we don't see. Massive gas or dust clouds would be opaque.
Every hypothesis other than WIMPs fails. The only problem with WIMPs is that we haven't detected them (yet).
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They're trying to find an easier explanation than the current Dark Matter / Dark Energy theory. The observations of course remain the same. The idea only is that there may perhaps be a simpler and more intuitive explanation for what we observe. I don't dismiss such ideas as horrible or stupid, because it's always interesting to ponder new theories just for sport.
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As there's not much direct evidence for dark matter,....
Whoa pardner, stop right there. You are making a stunningly false statement to introduce the rest of your typing.
The direct evidence for dark matter is overwhelming at this point. It consists of the observed behavior of matter under gravitational influence at cosmic, down to sub-galactic scales, and its seen everywhere in the Universe we look. There is no doubt that the observations are valid. The purpose of the TFA is to show that attempting to explain dark matter away by trying to propose some new gravity
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The direct evidence for dark matter is overwhelming at this point. It consists of the observed behavior of matter under gravitational influence at cosmic, down to sub-galactic scales, and its seen everywhere in the Universe we look.
That is indirect evidence for dark matter, by definition.
Find some dark matter and we'll talk about direct evidence.
Dark matter is real. We just don't know what it is made from.
Capture some in a known volume, and then we'll know it's real.
There is no gravity (Score:3)
It's all just curved space. And we are just missing a few terms in the equation to describe that curvature.
The classical (and overly simplistic) graphical representation of gravity in two dimensions is a membrane distorted by a mass. Objects 'fall into' the 'gravity wells' represented by this distortion. Well, what if space is like a water bed? Put a heavy object in the middle of it and the surrounding surface pushes up further away. And that upward rise represents an area of gravitational repulsion.
Now, imaging that someone dropped a bowling ball on to the far end of the water bed. A really big waterbed. Waves would propagate (in the case of space, at the speed of light). Someone might have dropped a bowling ball onto space outside of our light cone (more than 13.8 billion light years away). And now we are riding on that very long wavelength slosh as the local universe rebounds. Resulting in weird gradients the cause of which are beyond our ability to sense.
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"It's all just curved space. And we are just missing a few terms in the equation to describe that curvature."
Umm ... ok stuff like that is really easy to say. Why should we believe it? I mean, it could be invisible pink unicorns instead.
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At least in name, "dark matter" assumes more: something that's matter, and is also dark. Meanwhile the fractured, rippled, imperfect etc. spacetime just assumes that some kind of fabric is not even, which sounds like assuming _less_, because we removed the assumption of perfectly homogeneous spacetime. And all of us have seen wrinkled clothes, well, they don't iron themselves.
Also, would we call black holes fudge factors too? After all, they don't emit much light. Aren't most observational tests that confir
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Dark as in the dark side of the Moon or darkest Africa? Dark has two meanings, lack of light and unknown. So unknown matter.
Looking forward to an answer (Score:2)
Cosmologists are in a pretty weird place with this. Their current models don't explain reality, so they need to find this mysterious, supposedly invisible matter to validate their theory, or come up with a theory that explains the model, or find some other missing piece that allows everything to fit together neatly.
I've always thought the "dark matter" explanation was a bit too convenient, like an unknown constant added to an equation just to make it balance out. I've got a feeling there is some fundament
Re:Looking forward to an answer (Score:5, Insightful)
I have noticed that every single "dark matter skeptic" on /. shows no evidence of actually having done even minimal reading on the subject to find out what the observational evidence shows.
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I'd consider my self a dark matter skeptic. I do know that the body of evidence showing that "something is going on" is huge and I'm pretty sure I've heard astrophysicists on a couple of occasions state, in counter to naysayers on the topic, that "if it doesn't exist, then our fundamental understanding of physics is fucked." (I'm embellishing the paraphrasing a bit)
But this story, while its meant to kind of counter the naysayers, hits exactly on the kind of thinking we really need more of in my opinion. Ins
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supposedly invisible matter
The only property that matter needs to be "invisible" in this case is to not interact with electromagnetic forces. And we already know of a type of matter -- neutrinos -- that has that very property (even if the known neutrinos for other reasons have to be ruled out as constituting "dark matter").
Further, now we know for several reasons that the known neutrinos have mass, and under established particle physics that implies the existence of counterpart "sterile neutrinos". Under physics formulated prior to t
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supposedly invisible matter
The only property that matter needs to be "invisible" in this case is to not interact with electromagnetic forces. And we already know of a type of matter -- neutrinos -- that has that very property (even if the known neutrinos for other reasons have to be ruled out as constituting "dark matter").
The existence of a kind of matter which does not interact with electromagnetic forces but can't be dark matter is a strike against the theory, though, since the only kind of matter we know of which could fit the bill... doesn't.
What all that means is that you're living in a world where the existence of one type of "invisible" matter is well-established, and where the simplest explanation of the known properties of that type of "invisible" matter is a second species of "invisible" matter.
It would be if not for neutrinos' behavior. Since the only kind of matter we know of which doesn't interact electromagnetically doesn't behave the way it would have to in order to be what we're looking for, all we really know is that we don't know how likely it is. If we find another
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You think that's bad, you should see the fudge factor they introduced to explain why the Sun shines. They came up with this stupid theory that elements could be transformed into a different element by fusing atoms together, releasing energy, basic alchemy. And to make their equations work, they had to invent a little tiny particle that was so small and non-interacting that one of these imaginary particles could travel through the Earth without hitting anything.
Stupid cosmologists, always adding fudge factor
Oh, horse shit (Score:4, Insightful)
All you need is a tiny effect that we don't know about that is too small to detect locally, and since we don't have any sensors a few light years away we'd never even notice the phase error.
We don't know what we don't know, there is no reason to think the thing we don't know about is actually related to gravity.
When the prediction is wrong, it means the hypothesis is wrong. It does not mean the hypothesis is correct, but physics was different in the past, or that maybe a bunch of other variables not in our equation exist, and we can ignore them because we made a separate hypothesis that accounts for them (but only in the frequency domain, we don't even have time domain measurements).
A bunch of morons trying really hard to fit their incorrect hypotheses to experiments, not because it is good science, but because they know that nobody in their lifetime is going to install sensors far enough apart to actually test any of this. And they really, really want to participate in this science anyway, even if means masturbating over a manuscript and calling it sciencey.
As long as it fits the data (Score:2)
The shape of space (Score:2)
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Picking up on your observation, "we assume that it is uniform (flat) everywhere and everywhen."
When we first began to look into distant space, our best understanding was that space was (forgive the simplification), "dark, empty and cold". Later, we discovered microwaves, which then in turn led to us to detect "interference" from them, which then in turn led us to discover the CMWB, which we've since figured out is basically the dying echoes of the Bi
MiHsC (Score:2)
Mike McCulloch's MiHsC proposes an interesting new formulation for intertia and gravitational attraction. His theory seems to predict galaxy rotations very well.
http://physicsfromtheedge.blogspot.com/
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However he has to explain all observational evidence at all scales as well or better than existing theory. Let us know when he does that, he will get a Nobel Prize then.
Fitting an elephant. (Score:2)
There is a famous quote from John Von Neumann , "With four parameters I can fit an elephant, and with five I can make him "wiggle his trunk [mpi-cbg.de] .
Fermi gave a young Freeman Dyson a hard lesson by dismissing his theory out of hand with this reasoning. This model looks pretty much the same to me. Of course the context is a bit different, they don't hope that they found something, rather the opposite.
Weirder (Score:2)
The Universe is not only weirder than we imagine, its weirder than we can imagine.
(I know the original quote (from Haldane I think) used the word queerer instead but these days that would upset some of the 'differently gendered' people and their SJW supporters.)
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Don't mangle the quote. It has meaning, and that meaning has not changed even if some people have adopted the term and others are offended by it.
Magnets (Score:2)
Still less bizarre than Quantum Mechanics (Score:2)
And look, Quantum Mechanics cannot deal with Gravity! Now if that is not a colossal hint, I do not know what is.
So trading a constant for a variable? (Score:2)
What we should call it (Score:2)
! OK, you can mod me down as a troll, but...
"would be attractive at some length scales and repulsive at others"
Maybe call it the Trump Field Affect?
Changing force direction is not strange (Score:2)
Easier doesn't mean more right. (Score:2)
Rmember that Occam's razor is actually a logical fallacy. Just because it is easier or simpler, doesn't mean it's more right.
Its very badly expressed underlying kernel of truth is, that you should check for the simpler soutions first. Because that, on a statistical average, gets you the answer faster. (Though nature has no need to actually obey a certain statistical distribution in your lifetime.)
In say that as somebody who currently favors dark matter over this scalar field explanation, mind you. So keep y
Gravitational repulsion (Score:2)
However, I CAN explain away gravity w/ dark energy (Score:2)
Here's how I do it: Gravity doesn't exist. Gravity and Dark Energy are identical forces. Gravity is just the space pushing us against the planet, in a Casimir effect sort of way. I still can't explain dark matter, though...
SImple, really (Score:2)
What if it's magnetism vs. gravity? (Score:2)
What if magnetism is what's pushing things apart? If the magnetic force is stronger than gravity (since like magnetic poles repel each other when they are facing each other), then massive objects will repel each other. When massive objects are closer together such that gravity is stronger than the repelling force of magnetism, they will crash into each other.
Dark energy explained. (Score:2)
All these "gravity must be weird" or "there must be a lot of dark energy around" are based on slightly flimsy evendence of measurements on the expanding universe. Wild extrapolations and assumptions to come at the results. For "small" distances inside our galaxy we can use parallax measurements by taking pictures 0.5 years apart. The "viewpoint" has shifted by 200 million miles, so you can calculate how far things are.
But beyond that there are assumptions that certain supernovae are always the same intensit
Weird to whom? (Score:2)
Let's not let our biases of what we consider weird be what discounts a theory. The evidence should be what rules it out.
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We assume that the Laws of Physics are identical everywhere without knowing for sure if that's truly the case. Se we sort of already do have Dark Science when we believe these laws apply everywhere, are identical everywhere and follow a perfectly flat and uniform distribution across the entire universe.
The problem with that is that now, we don't need to even try to find out, because the answer to anything that we don't know approaches religion with "God did it". Because we can just solve every problem with "The laws of physics are different there". Problem solved, case closed, stop the funding because there's nothing more to find out. Interestingly, the "speed of light changes over time" hypothesis has been used to "prove" Young Earth creationism. To little avail. Because if the laws of physics do indeed
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Dark matter is not necessarily dark, nor is it necessarily matter. It is a placeholder that explicitly states "We're not sure what is going on here".
And that is exactly it. Science does not presume to explain everything. It is quite comfortable with areas of "we have no clue" and dark matter is not the only one. It is just a certain type of person that cannot stand the unknown and frantically grasps for an explanation. These are the same people that take the "laws" of Physics for absolutes. They are not. They are just locally well tested working assumptions. Their main purpose is to help you know when to ask for extraordinary proof. Extraordinary proof
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Dark matter is not necessarily dark, nor is it necessarily matter. It is a placeholder that explicitly states "We're not sure what is going on here".
And that is exactly it. Science does not presume to explain everything. It is quite comfortable with areas of "we have no clue" and dark matter is not the only one. It is just a certain type of person that cannot stand the unknown and frantically grasps for an explanation. These are the same people that take the "laws" of Physics for absolutes. They are not. They are just locally well tested working assumptions. Their main purpose is to help you know when to ask for extraordinary proof. Extraordinary proof is rare but not unheard of.
I think that those who are uncomfortable simply cannot understand that others might have flexible understanding. That is probably how religious faith arose - the need to have something that you consider to be absolutely true, and no amount of proof that it isn't true must be discarded. These people must very slowly adapt to reality that interferes with their absolutes. Can take decades, or even generations.
Me - I'll abandon anything proven to be wrong. What others find to be upsetting - I find exhilarati
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Dark matter is not necessarily dark, nor is it necessarily matter. It is a placeholder that explicitly states "We're not sure what is going on here".
But this is part of the dilemma. By saying we're not sure what it is do we imply to know that we know everything else. We don't. We're don't know everything about every particle, and yet do we assume the entire universe is made from it. We don't know what triggered the Big Bang either, nor do we know how the universe will end - or if it ends - and yet do some people happily accept it as an absolute.
I know no scientists that accept anything as an absolute. It's all in various degrees of certainty, with nothing being 100 percent. Absolute doesn't exist. As a simple example - will the sun rise tomorrow? I have a very high percent confidence it will. (I'd put a number in but the ascii filter flags it) But I'd never say I am absolutely sure. Being absolutely sure of any scientific or physics situation is the realm of politicians and fundamental religious people. Same for absolute denial.
Don't confuse hy
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We assume that the Laws of Physics are identical everywhere without knowing for sure if that's truly the case.
Actually, there is no good reason to assume that. It just simplifies things to assume it unless proven otherwise. These "laws" are just localized observations often with several levels of indirection. Sure, extraordinary proof will be needed if we find some real difference, but dark matter has escaped conventional explanations for so long, it is a prime candidate.
The laws of physics MUST be identical everywhere (Score:2)
By definition.
Suppose we discovered that in far away places gravity was a repulsive force. Well, that would then just become another law of physics.
But certainly a very odd one. But not much odder than quantum mechanics.
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We cannot see most of the present state of the universe. Shocking, I know.
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We can see almost to the beginning of the universe in all directions, so ...
We don't actually know if it is the beginning. It is only how far back we can currently see and based on this do we carefully say that it is the beginning, because simply don't have no further data.
It is sadly thanks to a few absolutists, people who love to believe in absolutes and in all-explaining theories, that some are stuck on the idea that the universe began in a Big Bang and that it has to end in an infinite expansion. We don't actually know what the Big Bang triggered nor do we have any data on the
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We can see galaxies 400 years after big bang, which did happen as there is ample evidence for it.
Ignoring your desperation and insult, just having images from after an event isn't the same as having evidence of the event. That we then simply refer to it as a "Big Bang" is because we lack any better interpretation. It is a rather comical description of it and wasn't ever meant to be taken as the literal truth.
If you actually believe the universe started in a singular point out of absolute nothingness then where is your proof? Well, you don't have any. So try to choose your next words more wisely or you'
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but the Big Bang *isn't* the start of universe from one singular point, nor from "absolute nothingness." No one is claiming that, field theory says something quite different.
"Just having images?" Yes, light from the universe as it was 400 million years after an initial state of high temperature and pressure, the Big Bang is that state. Also another persisting evidence, the CMB formed when electrons and protons could bind to form hydrogen a mere 380 thousand years after the Big Bang. Hard evidence.
The evidence from after the Big Bang still isn't the same as having evidence of the Big Bang. In fact, if you do take the common belief of the Big Bang being the sole start of the universe and the point of creation of all matter and energy, than it evades proof by definition, since all evidence takes on the form of matter (i.e. a photo plate) or energy (i.e. a light projection). So the event cannot ever actually be proven. The Big Bang is an abstract similar to God being an abstract.
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Have you ever seen gravity? Touched it? Or do we just infer it from how things act? The Big Bang is based on the same sort of evidence.
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People say God is everywhere. God created the universe and that the proof of his existence is the universe itself. Just look around you...
I don't doubt this! I understand religious belief, I can have my own, and I can still apply logic to my world. Many scientists go to church on Sundays or mosque on Fridays, and are able to distinguish between their belief and their work. It doesn't make them hypocrites.
I can also believe in the Big Bang Theory, that it created the universe and that it was a self-evident e
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One is logical and consistent with the universe.
It is not logical to extrapolate towards infinity or zero and call the result "evidence".
A mathematician allows you to do this within the realm of mathematics. A physicists does not and they will ask you for physical proof of your claim.
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That's kind of the point of research like this, we either have a massive error in our understanding of gravity which was effectively last revised with General Relativity or the Standard Model of Particle Physics. We know there's issues with small scale physics and gravitational interactions, the theories don't mesh well and predict things we are fairly certain don't occur at some scales and at the very large scales we have observations like the Dark Energy and Dark Matter phenomenon's that can't be explaine
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I was thinking the same thing. I'm not a physicist, so I'm sure they've thought through this, but the analogy should be obvious from the summary. So maybe we have the weak gravitational force and the strong gravitational force, and once we have those, the math will all collapse, dark matter goes away, all forces resolve into a single theory of everything, and relativity and quantum mechanics all work with the same math.
Or more likely, this will just further complicate things, and we'll find that we're fur
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The problem with changing general relativity is that, while it's possible to account for some of the effects of dark matter, gravitational lensing and the like are relatively small-scale anomalies that occur in some places and not others. Something is causing uneven curvature of space.