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Dark Matter — "Alternative Gravity" Team Responds

An anonymous reader writes, "Following previous results, an international team of astronomers answers, defending the case for a modification of the theory of gravity. This article presents an alternative to dark matter and states constraints on the neutrino mass. In short, dark matter is still not a necessity, provided that neutrinos weigh 2eV. This is allowed by what we currently know and should be tested in the KATRIN experiment in 2009."

7 of 215 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Anti-dark-matter scientists are like ID scienti by denominateur · · Score: 5, Informative

    err, neutrinos do have mass, but not as much as stated in the paper. As far as current experiments go neutrinos come in three flavours and interchanging between them is only possible if they have mass. It has been shown in experiments that they change type and hence must have mass.

  2. Re:Anti-dark-matter scientists are like ID scienti by FhnuZoag · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Enh.

    Neutrinos *do* have mass, and this fact is accepted by pretty much all physicists. The argument for this comes from discovery that they change states over the course of their lives, which means that they experience time, which means that they cannot travel at the speed of light, which means they must have a small mass. (This explains the apparently deficiency of solar neutrinos which was a problem in the 70s) Pinning down the exact value of this mass is more troublesome, though - for now, we know only that it's small, but positive.

    What more puzzles me about this statement is that neutrinos have generally been counted as *part* of dark matter - in particular, they are proposed to constitute some of those so-called Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) which is one of two possible models for dark matter. I don't see how changing the details of these particles would change how neccessary they are, unless these guys are trying a bait and switch by redefining dark matter to be unneccessary. (Which would be a very dirty trick.)

  3. No mass for photons by jpflip · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'd like to clear this up because there are very common misconception that photons are massive or that something has to be massive to feel gravity, both of which are false.

    THEORY: In our current understanding, photons are forbidden from having mass because of the way quantum electrodynamics (the most precisely tested theory in the history of science) works. It's an exercise in field theory to show it, but the gist is that electromagnetism (light, charge conservation, electric and magnetic forces...) are a consequence of a symmetry of nature, and that symmetry only works if the associated carrier particle (the photon) has exactly zero mass.

    EXPERIMENT: If the photon had even a very tiny mass, it would also mean that the electromagnetic interactions would become short range (just like the weak interactions, which are mediated by a massive carrier). The usual inverse square law would become an exponential falloff. This has been tested for in laboratories (and in astronomy!) very precisely, so there are ridiculously strict upper limits on the photon mass.

    This doesn't mean photons don't feel gravity!! Gravity interacts with all energy, not just mass, and so the energy of a photon is enough to cause it to bend around massive objects.

  4. Re:why would matter be dark by Claws+Of+Doom · · Score: 5, Informative

    Their paths don't bend - it is the paths themselves that are distorted in space-time by the gravity well. This distortion appears to be bent in three dimensions - to the photon it is perfectly straight...

    (ok, ok, simply *massive* oversimplification here - to the point of error, but I hope you understand my motives.)

  5. Re:Anti-dark-matter scientists are like ID scienti by vondo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think I'd regret responding to the complete misunderstanding of forces and neutrinos in the body of your post. That would take pages.

    Let me just respond to your title. That is completely wrong as well. Now, I think the alternative gravity guys are probably wrong and at this point I think they are stretching their theories to their limits. Dark matter is the "easiest" explanation. But, what they are doing is science. They are coming up with an alternate theory that makes predictions and testing them. The are countering circumstantial evidence for DM with another theory. They are not picking just one small thing, saying "Well that can't be true because of [insert some non-science babble like you just posted] so clearly God created everything." in contradiction to vast bodies of scientific evidence. And the alternative gravity people are publishing in peer-reviewed journals.

    ID can't say any of those things. While the motivations may be similar (not wanting to give up on old ways of thinking about things) the methodology is completely different.

  6. Clarification: dark matter is STILL real! by jpflip · · Score: 5, Informative

    People should NOT take the impression from this article that there is doubt that dark matter exists. The only doubt being raised is over what form the dark matter takes. Let me clarify:

    (Note: Baryons are protons and neutrons. "Non-baryonic" means not made up of the building blocks of ordinary atoms.)

    The beauty of the Clowes work (the "proof that dark matter exists" from a couple of weeks ago) is that the colliding clusters they worked on give simple, clean evidence that galaxy clusters are really dominated by invisible, non-baryonic dark matter. At it's core, it's a very simple argument. Two clusters collided, and the baryonic clouds (hot gas, seen with X-rays) experienced drag and got a bit hung-up passing through one another. Most of the mass, however (seen with gravitational lensing), passed straight through with no drag. We see the X-rays and lensing in two different places on the sky - they really are two different kinds of stuff. This is VERY direct proof that most of the mass in galaxy clusters is not the ordinary matter we see on earth - it's something non-baryonic that does not interact with light and does not interact much with ordinary matter. In other words, dark matter is real, physical stuff!

    This article argues only about what that dark matter might actually be. It's generally believed that it can't be neutrinos, because neutrinos are so light that they would mess up galaxy formation, and so must be some new, exotic kind of particle. The logic here is that very light particles move so fast that they don't clump together well under their own gravity, which would disrupt the formation of galaxies and smaller clusters of galaxies. All this paper argues is that the dark matter might not be a truly new particle - the combination of modified gravity and neutrinos can be made to work. They still conclude that the invisible neutrinos must outmass the baryons in the clusters by a factor of at least 2.5.

    Many people (particularly those who do not understand the evidence) dislike the idea of dark matter, thinking it sounds too much like epicycles. That's understandable, and it's good to be very skeptical of such a weird idea (I know I was). The truth is that there is now enough evidence to say that it really does exist, no matter how strange it may seem to us. The future lies is figuring out what the dark matter is actually made of, not bland assertions that "that just can't be right...".

  7. From someone who just finished *reading* the paper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The real result of Clowe et al's fascinating work was to show that the missing mass in the bullet cluster must be COLLISIONLESS, whatever gravity looks like (a purely baryonic bullet cluster has been *falsified*). However, a big misconception about it was to think it was a direct *confirmation* of the Lambda-CDM concordance model that everybody is supposed to believe (may I recall that real science is about *falsifying* things, not "proving" them right), or that it was falsifying MOND. Actually, it is known for years that MOND is UNABLE to fit the temperature profiles of X-ray emitting clusters from their pure baryonic content. The fix, for MOND to stay in the game, was to propose that neutrinos have a 2eV mass and can then make up for the missing mass, in clusters ONLY, because they are too light to cluster on the galaxy scales (incidentally they are also too light to form structure in GR, but this is not a problem for structure formation in MOND). However, if dark matter is indeed cold as the lambda-CDM guys tend to take for granted, and even more since Clowe's work, why does the 2eV neutrino combined with MOND seem to work in ALL clusters??? The bullet cluster being a totally new kind of constraint for MOND on the galaxy cluster scale (constraint coming from gravitational lensing instead of temperature profiles), it was mandatory to check if 2eV neutrinos were excluded even in MOND, which would have *falsified* MOND indeed! This is what those guys wanted to do, to *falsify* MOND once and for all, but the surprising result is that they didn't manage to do so, because the SAME neutrino mass as the one needed to fit temperature profiles of other clusters ACTUALLY WORKS in the bullet cluster too. Their conclusion is thus just that MOND is *not excluded* by Clowe's data. One will thus have to wait for particle physics experiments to rule out massive neutrinos to rule out MOND. Until then, place your bets...