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Scientists Expand Knowledge of Dark Matter

nife00 writes "BBC News is reporting that British scientists at Cambridge have expanded the current understanding of the mysterious particles known as dark matter." According to the article: "[The Cambridge Team] has at last been able to place limits on how it is packed in space and measure its "temperature". "It's the first clue of what this stuff might be," said Professor Gerry Gilmore. "For the first time ever, we're actually dealing with its physics," he told the BBC News website."

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  1. Here's what makes me unhappy by rknop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here's what makes me unhappy:

    The Cambridge University team expects to submit the first of its results to a leading astrophysics journal in the next few weeks.

    I don't like this "press release before publication" mode of doing science. It's all about making sure that you get the attention and public recognition, and not about propery distributing the results so that others can understand and evaluate what you've done. Alas, it seems that Marketing Is All in the modern world, and not just in the USA any more. You can be sure that the institutions who house these scientists love to get the attention and so forth.

    I'd be happier if the paper had already been accepted by some real journal, with a preprint available on www.arxiv.org. As it is... we have a press release and a pop-sci article about an intersting result that's hard to truly evaluate. The article is mostly good and sounds reliable, but in my experience these pop-sci articles usually get something wrong. (For instance, even though 10,000 degrees sounds "hot", given the likely mass of the Dark Matter particle, it still is "cold" in the cosmological sense of "cold dark matter", which really means "nonrelativistic dark matter". I'm not sure how much of a surprise that temperature is, but it's probably not enough to make CDM wrong.)

    -Rob