by iamlucky13 » Thu May 17, 2007 11:22 pm
NoelC, you're basically describing MOND. It could be analagous to relativity. Newton's laws described everything well at the velocities we were used to, but as we encountered higher velocities, especially being able to measure the speed of light, we ran into problems. There might be something similar with distance and gravity. This bothers cosmologists and astrophysicists, as did relativity back in the day, partially because it screws up to varying degrees a lot of existing work, partially because it's just bizarre and unexpected. However, as I mentioned before, this particular observation either contradicts MOND, or makes it twice as bizarre.
Dark matter became a lot more palpatable as I learned a little more about the various particles out there besides the electrons, photons, and quarks we're familiar with, and extreme case effects among those particles like superfluidity and superconductivity...those two both relating to electromagnetic effects.
Cold gas and black holes seem unlikely. We're talking over 5 times as much mass as what is visible and 50 times what is contained in actual stars (~90% of the visible mass is gas and dust). Even cold gas counts among the visible, because just by being warmer than absolute 0 it has to radiate weakly. I believe one of the main uses of observatories like the gigantic Parkes Radio Telescope is mapping out this cold gas and dust based on its low frequency emissions, for example.
Black holes likewise become visible when they interact with other matter, for example, emitting x-rays from an accretion disc.
These black holes and cold gas would have to be distributed in similar haloes that dark matter is posited to form around galaxies to provide the observed influence.
It's all so complicated...and we haven't even touched on dark energy!
NoelC, you're basically describing MOND. It could be analagous to relativity. Newton's laws described everything well at the velocities we were used to, but as we encountered higher velocities, especially being able to measure the speed of light, we ran into problems. There might be something similar with distance and gravity. This bothers cosmologists and astrophysicists, as did relativity back in the day, partially because it screws up to varying degrees a lot of existing work, partially because it's just bizarre and unexpected. However, as I mentioned before, this particular observation either contradicts MOND, or makes it twice as bizarre.
Dark matter became a lot more palpatable as I learned a little more about the various particles out there besides the electrons, photons, and quarks we're familiar with, and extreme case effects among those particles like superfluidity and superconductivity...those two both relating to electromagnetic effects.
Cold gas and black holes seem unlikely. We're talking over 5 times as much mass as what is visible and 50 times what is contained in actual stars (~90% of the visible mass is gas and dust). Even cold gas counts among the visible, because just by being warmer than absolute 0 it has to radiate weakly. I believe one of the main uses of observatories like the gigantic Parkes Radio Telescope is mapping out this cold gas and dust based on its low frequency emissions, for example.
Black holes likewise become visible when they interact with other matter, for example, emitting x-rays from an accretion disc.
These black holes and cold gas would have to be distributed in similar haloes that dark matter is posited to form around galaxies to provide the observed influence.
It's all so complicated...and we haven't even touched on dark energy!