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Re: That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". Dreaded Anomaly Send a noteboard - 17/05/2011 02:09:55 AM
Not a complete lack, but nothing like a professionals, no. A lot of it's outdated, too; a part of me died when I found out quasars are no longer considered possible white holes. I know fusion isn't restricted to hydrogen (else helium would be the heaviest element), but fuzing say, transuranides, seems energy prohibitive. I'm curious how cosmic background radiation has ruled out the possibility of heavy nuclei pockets surrounding galaxies; I'd have thought scattering over such a great distance would make detection of all but the most massive quantity of super heavy nuclei impossible, but presumably that's not the basis on which the exclusion was made.


Measurements of the cosmic microwave background constrain how much normal (baryonic) matter there is in the universe. We can see much of that matter in the form of light elements in stars, and we can make further observations to estimate the amounts of heavier elements that have been produced. The numbers just don't work out.

That last statement doesn't follow from the others. Far away lensing is consistent with exotic dark matter, but no less consistent with MACHOs; MACHOs were ruled out because no nearby gravitational lensing was observed and galactic rotation says dark matter is uniformly distributed within galaxies. That works if there's enough dark matter to significantly affect galactic rotation but not enough to create nearby gravitational lensing, but those two propositions tend to be contradictory unless there's a BIG difference between the amount of dark matter necessary for the former and the latter. If that's the case I have no objection, I just want to be sure that's what you're saying.


Far away lensing is not consistent with MACHOs. Go read Sean Carroll's blog post a few more times.

Lensing happens when there's a concentrated source of matter between the observer and the object; for dark matter that's distributed fairly homogeneously within the galaxy, that's very unlikely to happen. When we look at lensing from entire clusters of far-away galaxies, we get results that match exotic matter expectations, but not ordinary matter expectations.

Hopefully not, but that demonstrates that my concern that kind of thinking didn't end in the 1600s is valid. I don't doubt it's less likely, and significantly, but it's far from impossible, particularly if we allow ourselves the luxury of thinking it impossible; that's actually an EXAMPLE of the kind of erroneous and overconfident thinking that worries me, and further demonstrates it can still occur, because it manifestly has.


You're conflating "simply doesn't occur as often" with "impossible." I did not use the latter term.

It could also be a form of normal matter acting in ways existing theory didn't anticipate, which is not so far fetched since existing theories obviously failed to anticipate SOMETHING or we wouldn't be seeking a way to reconcile them with recent anomalous observations. You've convinced me exotic dark matter is the best candidate, but I'd still like to be certain it's not prematurely designated the ONLY candidate.


That suggestion seems to boil down to MOND or something similar, and as many sources will describe for you, such modified theories do not work well.

Exotic dark matter is the most likely candidate. My statements have all been, explicitly or implicitly, in terms of probabilities which are based on evidence and will be updated when more evidence is available. This is the correct way to reason about empirical issues. Your qualitative, rhetorical style is causing you to blow things out of proportion.
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Exciting video about the universe - 28/04/2011 10:14:55 AM 1386 Views
Cool, and true *NM* - 28/04/2011 11:46:29 AM 487 Views
I still think dark matter's just non-luminous matter without a convenient light source to reflect. - 28/04/2011 10:34:21 PM 1096 Views
We've just about ruled out the idea that dark matter is just non-luminous "ordinary" matter. - 28/04/2011 11:44:34 PM 1034 Views
I'm aware of the Bullet Cluster, though admittedly not much more than that. - 29/04/2011 01:52:49 AM 945 Views
Re: I'm aware of the Bullet Cluster, though admittedly not much more than that. - 29/04/2011 02:56:32 AM 1059 Views
Re: I'm aware of the Bullet Cluster, though admittedly not much more than that. - 30/04/2011 05:02:49 PM 1007 Views
Re: I'm aware of the Bullet Cluster, though admittedly not much more than that. - 30/04/2011 08:56:35 PM 952 Views
Re: I'm aware of the Bullet Cluster, though admittedly not much more than that. - 02/05/2011 01:28:30 AM 931 Views
Re: I'm aware of the Bullet Cluster, though admittedly not much more than that. - 04/05/2011 04:18:18 AM 1014 Views
There's such a thing as knowing when you're licked, and I believe I am. - 07/05/2011 02:04:53 AM 1109 Views
Re: There's such a thing as knowing when you're licked, and I believe I am. - 09/05/2011 11:28:48 PM 933 Views
Re: There's such a thing as knowing when you're licked, and I believe I am. - 14/05/2011 05:36:45 AM 902 Views
Re: There's such a thing as knowing when you're licked, and I believe I am. - 17/05/2011 02:09:40 AM 966 Views
Re: There's such a thing as knowing when you're licked, and I believe I am. - 19/05/2011 04:55:21 AM 905 Views
Re: There's such a thing as knowing when you're licked, and I believe I am. - 24/05/2011 09:32:27 PM 975 Views
The Pati-Salam model was the one I had in mind. - 24/05/2011 10:34:04 PM 924 Views
Re: The Pati-Salam model was the one I had in mind. - 24/05/2011 11:08:01 PM 1145 Views
Re: The Pati-Salam model was the one I had in mind. - 25/05/2011 01:27:10 AM 950 Views
Re: The Pati-Salam model was the one I had in mind. - 31/05/2011 09:16:18 AM 1018 Views
Also, re: lensing from ordinary matter: - 29/04/2011 05:18:47 AM 947 Views
This seems like another example of what confuses the issue. - 30/04/2011 05:25:04 PM 1078 Views
Re: This seems like another example of what confuses the issue. - 30/04/2011 08:56:40 PM 1046 Views
That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". - 02/05/2011 01:29:03 AM 1042 Views
Re: That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". - 04/05/2011 04:18:24 AM 988 Views
Re: That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". - 07/05/2011 02:05:02 AM 1187 Views
Re: That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". - 09/05/2011 11:29:36 PM 951 Views
Re: That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". - 14/05/2011 05:35:56 AM 1241 Views
Re: That discussion seems to reduce to "as little new and exotic physics as possible". - 17/05/2011 02:09:55 AM 837 Views
Re: I still think... (apparently, there is a 100 character limit on subjects, and yours was 99) - 28/04/2011 11:57:15 PM 1405 Views
Seems to happen to me a lot; sorry. - 29/04/2011 12:56:14 AM 940 Views
None of this reflects on the actual facts of dark matter. - 29/04/2011 01:32:52 AM 967 Views
I concede my grasp (or grope) is a somewhat superficial laymans, yes. - 30/04/2011 04:30:28 PM 1092 Views
Re: I concede my grasp (or grope) is a somewhat superficial laymans, yes. - 30/04/2011 08:56:44 PM 906 Views
Re: I concede my grasp (or grope) is a somewhat superficial laymans, yes. - 02/05/2011 01:28:58 AM 1435 Views
Re: I concede my grasp (or grope) is a somewhat superficial laymans, yes. - 04/05/2011 04:18:27 AM 913 Views
I don't object to changing my mind, but can take more convincing than I really should. - 07/05/2011 02:05:09 AM 1176 Views
Re: I don't object to changing my mind, but can take more convincing than I really should. - 09/05/2011 11:32:17 PM 1047 Views

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