Dim Galaxy Could Give Clues to Dark Matter
chamblah writes "Reuters is reporting that the dimmest galaxy has been found. 'In fact, it is dimmest galaxy ever detected, which means it could give clues to the mysterious dark matter that appears to be pushing regular matter around.' Since this galaxy is '...100 times dimmer than the night sky', it could only be detected using 'instruments involved in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, the sky-mapping project.' The galaxy is also part of the Andromeda galaxy, only 2 million light years from us. The article goes on to explain how finding these dim galaxies can be useful, 'Andromeda IX fits the profile for the small, dim galaxies that cosmic theorists predict should exist as leftovers from the formation of big galaxies.'"
They're just eco-friendly and power saving.
What It Means to be a Liberal.
... in short, you support protecting the guilty and killing the innocent.
The other day I found myself very puzzled.
I know what I believe, why I believe it, the philosophical foundations of my beliefs. I've studied everything from Karl Marx to Ludwig von Mises, from Friedrich Hayek to FDR, from Edmund Burke to Bertrand Russell, from Aristotle to Ayn Rand.
I understand modern conservative thought. I understand libertarian thought. I understand classical liberalism. What I can't begin to comprehend is modern liberalism. Maybe you can help me. As near as I can tell, to be a liberal:
You have to believe the AIDS virus is spread by a lack of funding.
IF there is a church that is valid, it has been pre-approved by the government.
You have to be against capital punishment but for abortion on demand
You have to believe that the same public school idiot who can't teach 4th graders how to read is qualified to teach those same kids about sex.
You have to believe that trial lawyers are selfless heroes and doctors are overpaid.
You have to believe that guns in the hands of law-abiding Americans are more of a threat than nuclear weapons in the hands of the Red Chinese.
You have to believe that global temperatures are less affected by cyclical, documented changes in the brilliance of the Sun, and more affected by yuppies driving SUVs.
You have to believe that gender roles are artificial but being gay is natural.
You have to believe that businesses create oppression and governments create prosperity.
You have to believe that hunters don't care about nature but pasty, fey activists who've never been outside Seattle do.
You have to believe that self-esteem is more important than actually doing something to earn it.
You have to believe there was no art before federal funding.
You have to believe the military, not corrupt politicians, start wars.
You have to believe the free market that gives us 500+ channels can't deliver the quality that PBS does.
You have to believe the NRA is bad, because they stand up for certain parts of the Constitution, while the ACLU is good, because they stand up for certain parts of the Constitution.
You have to believe that taxes are too low but ATM fees are too high.
You have to believe that Harriet Tubman, Cesar Chavez and Gloria Steinem are more important to American history than Thomas Jefferson, General Robert E. Lee or Thomas Edison.
You have to believe that standardized tests are racist, but racial quotas and set-asides aren't.
You have to believe second-hand smoke is more dangerous than HIV.
You have to believe Hillary Clinton is really a lady and Rosie O'Donnell is not really a man who is jealous of Tom Selleck.
You have to believe conservatives are racists but that black people couldn't make it without your help.
You have to believe that the only reason socialism hasn't worked anywhere it's been tried is because the right people haven't been in charge.
Looking back on my list, it seems shallow, muddled, contradictory, divorced of logic and a bit sadistic.
Well, then. If that doesn't describe the modern liberal, I don't know what does.
It's not "part of" Andromeda; it's a satellite galaxy, like the Magellanic Clouds are to the Milky Way. It wouldn't make a whole lot of sense to talk about a dim galaxy that's part of a regular galaxy, anyway ...
The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
Exactly, just like I-90 is part of the Honda freeway!
Our intelligent designer has never created an animal that we couldn't improve by strapping a bomb to it.
So ... I've R'd TFA, but I'm still not an astrophysicist ...
Does one infer from this that the 'missing' dark matter is possibly just a bunch of stuff we haven't been able to see yet? Or is the magnitude of the dark matter just too big to be accounted for by dim structures in space?
Just askin'.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
How the fuck can it be? Do they have a telescope which magnifies darkness instead of light? Any portion of sky which doesn't have a star/galaxy in it is black, black black!
> Reuters is reporting that the dimmest galaxy has been found
Yeah, I always that galaxy wasn't too bright...
Scientists have now found the brightest dark-sucker galaxy to date...
Alright, I hope this doesn't come off as condescending, but IAAA (grad student, at least), and *one* dim, tiny dwarf galaxy will tell us very little about dark matter.
You can measure its velocity dispersion to infer its total mass, and you can measure its light and spectra to attempt to infer its mass in baryons (protons, neutrons, and electrons), and you can measure the spectral lines to determine its metallicity, but this has nothing to do with inferring dark matter.
Dark Matter is inferred, at least when it comes to galaxies and clusters of galaxies (to keep it simple), because the mass required to provide the galaxy/cluster with the internal velocities observed is much more than what we see in starlight. Therefore, some of the matter is non-luminous, or "dark". Dark matter exists, on AVERAGE, so that 1/7 of the total mass in a galaxy is in baryons, and 6/7 is in dark matter. This ratio varies widely for different galaxies, and I do not see how *one* galaxy is going to tell us anything?
Also, if this satellite galaxy is less than ~100 kpc from Andromeda, the main galaxy's dark halo will envelop the satellite, too, further complicating the matter.
the mysterious dark matter that appears to be pushing regular matter around
Dark matter is all the matter in the universe that doesn't generate its own light. It is suposed to be at least 85% of the matter in the universe and therefore when we look up in the sky we are only seeing the 15% of the total matter at most.
Because of dark matter and given that there is so much matter in so little space, astronomers think the universe should be collapsing, but instead it is expanding.
Dark energy is an unkown source of energy that should be pulling all that matter apart. It is a theoretical explanation of why the universe is not collapsing. And a very bad at that. Very simmilar to the ether conjecture a century ago.
So please get your facts straight.
Also, since there is so much matter in the universe, and it was all in a very tiny place just after the big bang, we know for sure that we were inside a black hole. But nothing can escape a black hole, not even light. So we live inside a black hole. A gigantic black hole. Why don't we see the universe collapsing? Simply because time is a continuous and in the black hole event horizon, time doesn't flow. If you stay at the horizon, your clock doesn't go forward nor backward. Therefore as time is continuous, time must go backwards in the black hole, because it goes forward outside the black hole.
Therefore the universe is collapsing, but we see it time reversed, because our time is going backwards, so we see the universe expanding. If astronomers get to see the big bang, what they will really see will be our heat death.
Forgive the scepticism, but it may be worth noting that there are electrical discharge theories of the cosmos that do not need to invoke "dark matter" at all (though these theories are, for reasons unknown, not accepted by mainstream astrophysicists and cosmologists). The point being that maybe there ain't no such thing as "dark matter".
In the constellation SCO, there are quite a few dim galaxies floating about...
...the mysterious dark matter that appears to be pushing regular matter around
That must be the extra mysterious version of dark matter that works opposite to gravity (pushes).
The normally mysterious version of dark matter is simply dark and mysterious. It pulls.
Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
"there are electrical discharge theories of the cosmos that do not need to invoke "dark matter" at all" I was all ready to mod you up but, alas, no examples or links....
Sorry, I keep forgetting to add the tongue-in-cheek emoticon to the bottom of my posts...
sorry, didn't have the links on-hand when I posted and just figured ppl would google for them. Here are a couple of good ones. http://www.catastrophism.com/texts/bruce/ http://www.catastrophism.com/texts/bruce/era.htm I bring up Electrical Discharge Theory at all just because too few ppl think to question basic assumptions. In this case, most everyone presumes there's "dark matter" just because most physicists and astronomers tell them so, but history tells us that physicists and astronomers have been wrong about a lot of things (think Ptolemy and epicycles). It's just human nature, it's rooted in uncertainty, yet humans presume to know things as fact when all they have are interpretations. A case in point is "dark matter". It is only an interpretation for the observable data, an interpretation backed by not that much data (I mean, we can't even see this stuff), and "dark matter" is certainly not the only interpretation for the observable data.