You might like to check out the
Astronomy and "controlled scientific experiments" thread Michael; my last post there summarises what I see as the disconnect between modern astronomy, as a science, and your own views.
Michael Mozina wrote:Nereid wrote:In summary then:
The term "dark matter" (DM) is in widespread use among astronomers, with a pretty precise meaning,
It has a little too precise a meaning actually. You've made all sorts of assumptions about it that you cannot actually demonstrate. You've made up an invisible, non barionic that is able to travel though walls sort of matter than nobody has ever actually seen here on earth.
We've been over this, and over it, and over, and over ...
I don't see any value is repeating, yet again, what the standard term means (and commenting on what it doesn't mean).
and millions of high quality observations pointing to its existence.
No. You have millions of high quality observations that point us to the existence of *missing mass*. Whether that missing mass is contained in heavy suns or a new form of mass cannot be determined from 5 billion light years away. Occum's Razor, and common sense should preclude us from simply *assuming* the need for new forms of mass that might exist at that distance.
Ditto ... also a pretty good example of the difference between the way modern astronomy, as a science, works ... and your own approach.
In this case, no 'heavy suns' hypothesis has been proposed (that I know of), but plenty of 'baryonic mass' ones have ... and none has been shown (yet) to match the relevant observations ...
Maybe tomorrow there will be such a paper published, and maybe next year the relevant follow-up work will have been done, and non-baryonic (cold) DM will be sent to the dustbin of astronomy history.
However, until then, it's the best theory we have ...
No other, scientific, explanation of these millions of observations has (yet) been published in the relevant, peer-reviewed literature*.
So what? That does not mean that you personal theories have any legs to stand on. The fact that something is published does not make it true, otherwise my theories are "true" Nereid. Publishing a paper about an idea is not the be-all-end-all of "truthiness".
Of course.
However, that's the way the science of astronomy works today, and as we are a scientific forum, that's the standard we will use.
Let's be clear about one point here. Even if there are no "better" explanations out there, that is not evidence that your pet theory has merit. You cannot point to a published paper and *assume* it is accurate by virtue of being published. You cannot assume that another explanation must exist for your own theory to be falsified. I can disprove your theory without providing *any* alternative whatsoever.
You could ... in which case you'd have something like '
the Pioneer anomaly' - good observations about which no hypothesis presented, to date, adequately addresses.
The case of (non-baryonic) dark matter, however, is nothing like such an anomaly ... in fact, the consistency across much of astronomy, and from quite different physical mechanisms, is astonishing: rich clusters (at least three different, independent kinds of observations), spiral galaxies, and cosmology (large-scale structure, evolution, the CMB, ...).
Michael doesn't like DM, for various reasons.
The most important reason I don't like DM is because I don't have any faith in the belief that it actually exists. If one is a skeptic of an idea, one cannot just wave their hand and stop being a skeptic. I need some empirical evidence that DM actually exists. If you can provide that, then I'll be happy to let you speculate about how much DM might exist in deep space. If you can't produce a single gram of DM, nor any experiment to show it has an effect on matter, I very much doubt it actually exists., and it have no reason to believe it has any effect on nature. That's is the "reason" for my skepticism in a nutshell.
And, AFAIK, no one is asking you to give up your scepticism - what you choose to believe, or not believe, is no concern of anyone posting in the Cafe (I think).
However, if you continue to insist that 'non-baryonic DM' is bad astronomy (as a science), you need to start engaging in a scientific discussion*.
However, he hasn't (yet) been able to present a scientifically viable alternative explanation for the relevant observations (that does away with the need for DM).
I'm not required to do that! You keep insisting that you are right by default. Science doesn't work like that Nereid.
This is another disconnect between modern astronomy, as a science, and your views.
It is precisely one way that science does, in fact, work.
Oh, and I'm not '
right by default'; all I strive to do is accurately represent the current state of astronomical (scientific) research - if you find my summaries inaccurate, by all means correct them!
Your theory must stand on it's own merits irrespective of any alternative. Since you can't produce any dark matter, it has no "dark" legs to stand on, with or without an alternative to choose from.
I hope, by now, you realise that this is not the way modern science (astronomy) works.
Also, see above (re 'anomalies').
So unless and until he (or another member posting to the Cafe) can present such a case (based on papers published in relevant peer-reviewed astronomy journals), I think this thread has run its course ...
Why are you so intent on closing dissenting threads Nereid? Why can't your theories about astronomy and your opinions about DM include room for a few vocal skeptics like me?
As I have stated - once or twice - this is a scientific forum.
If you wish to express your opinions on the nature of modern astronomy, as a science, we may be able to accommodate you, to a limited extent (as we have already done).
If you wish to present ideas that have not yet been shown to be scientific (my 'three criteria', in short), then once you have stated those ideas and cannot produce support for them (in the form of papers published in relevant, peer-reviewed journals) - which you have done, many times - that will be the end of such presentations.
*
FWIW, a great many scientists find much of modern physics deeply unsettling, and are, in the MM mold, deeply sceptical. Quantum mechanics is one arena where this is particularly so ... yet QED (a quantum theory) is the most precisely tested theory in the history of science (and tested in earthly labs to boot)!