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Last thing I saw was the folks speculating on local dark matter in the solar system. Yes, it was serious work. The idea essentially was: if there is dark matter, and if it interacts only gravitaionally, then the solar system should pick up some tag along DM. And loose some, too. The question was, how much, and where is the equilibrium point (similar to chemical equilibriums, I think).
The work was aimed at detection possibilities. As I recall, it was covered in a story on the home page here. |
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Don't try this at home - We're what you call "professionals" - MythBusters. |
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Big Don. One of the things that occurred was that they detected oxygen with ultraviolet telescopy that was not hot enough to emit x-rays, but was visible in the ultraviolet. There was enough of it around the halos of galaxies that the need for dark matter was reduced about 50%. ...and they're just starting to look this way. pete
see:http://www.physorg.com/news130516845.html
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A third rate theory forbids A second rate theory explains after the fact A first rate theory predicts...A. Lomonosov Last edited by trinitree88 : 03-July-2008 at 07:40 PM. Reason: link |
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"What do you care what other people think?" -- Richard Feynman "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." -- Feynman, at the conclusion of his Challenger report |
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The presence of highly ionized oxygen (and other elements) between the galaxies is believed to trace large quantities of invisible, hot, ionized hydrogen in the universe. These vast reservoirs of hydrogen have largely escaped detection because they are too hot to be seen in visible light, yet too cool to be seen in X-rays. " link's words above. Since the quintionized oxygen traces out the hydrogen that is otherwise invisible, what mechanism is proposed to say that the same vast reservoirs of hot hydrogen cannot exist on the periphery of galaxies? It would seem to be that the lighter elements, mixed in with a soup of heavier ones, would have a higher RMS velocity and diffuse more rapidly out of a fireball, leaving galaxies in general with halos of hot hydrogen...Graham's Law, No? pete see:http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2000/0015multi/ and see:http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/obj...objectid=12820
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A third rate theory forbids A second rate theory explains after the fact A first rate theory predicts...A. Lomonosov Last edited by trinitree88 : 04-July-2008 at 02:52 PM. Reason: links |
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Thank you everybody.
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"The beauty of that discussion of averages is that you don't have to be an expert in Apollo or in photography in order to see where this time study "analysis" breaks down. You just have to be, well...not an idiot." -JayUtah |
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![]() Isn't the foundation of dark matter/dark energy simply matter/energy that "should be there" but we couldn't see/explain? If we find missing matter isn't that a point for gravity and one less point for that dark stuff? |
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Wasn't dark matter always considered subject to gravity and first described as a source for gravitational effects? (Or, are you thinking not of dark matter, but of dark energy?)
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The same "HAD" to be there translates to dark energy. For the universe to be expanding there HAS to be dark energy. I guess my kudos to gravity is that finding of real "matter" is a point for gravity and that as we add to the known "matter" out there we will negate the need for "Dark matter" and on the flip side of that we may negate the need for "Dark energy" since we may be able to prove or theorize things with more knowns of the whys & ifs. dark matter/dark energy are really bad names. Dark matter seems to describe missing mass that has a gravitational effect but dark energy is something that is somewhat anti-gravity and used to explain the expansion of the universe. Thus personally i'm thrilled when gravity as we understand it with items that have mass as we understand it comes out in the end. |
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So, if I understand it correctly, the observed proportions of the primordial elements indicate how many baryons there should be. Apparently we didn't see that many. Now what we see is closer to what is expected....all of the light element abundances depend on the amount of ordinary matter (baryons) relative to radiation (photons). For a classic exposition on this and other topics, check out The First Three Minutes by Weinberg.
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Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts. |
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I agree though that they are really bad names - if just for the fact they have chronically confused the general public. |
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A third rate theory forbids A second rate theory explains after the fact A first rate theory predicts...A. Lomonosov |
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Who said this Hydrogen was ejected from galaxies? It was there from the beginning, the Oxygen was dumped on it from galaxies, not the other way around. Read the press release again: they do a decent job describing it.
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"What do you care what other people think?" -- Richard Feynman "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." -- Feynman, at the conclusion of his Challenger report |
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The matter is expected period. It doesn't matter (hehe) what it was but the fact we can isolate it to baryonic matter seems to convey to me that we're discovering what we perceived as dark matter and filling in the "Expected" matter regardless. |
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This older BAUT thread is still relevant here, and many of the responses to this later thread are also good. These should do a good job answering the question posed in the OP.
Byronm: your confusion should be answered in those threads. Heck, the Wikipedia article on DM is actually pretty good, and could help direct you to other reading.
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"What do you care what other people think?" -- Richard Feynman "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled." -- Feynman, at the conclusion of his Challenger report |
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Since the HVC's consist of molecular hydrogen which generally only forms in intergalactic space in the presence of dust grains of metals I'm wondering if the dust grains |