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Hubble Builds 3D Dark Matter Map

astroengine writes "Dark matter can't be spotted directly because it doesn't interact with electromagnetic radiation (i.e. it doesn't emit any radiation and reflects no light). However, its gravitational influence on space-time can bend light from its otherwise straight path (a phenomenon known as 'lensing'). Using a sophisticated algorithm to scan a comprehensive Hubble Space Telescope survey of the cosmos, astronomers have plotted a map of 'weak lensing' events. Combining this with red shift measurements from ground-based observatories, they've produced a strikingly colorful 3D map of the structure of dark matter."

177 comments

  1. Now let's do the same with money by h00manist · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Let's map the financial "dark matter". It's not hard at all, as it all goes through banks. Except, of course, it would show a lot of things nobody wants seen, such as all the elegant addresses of the dirty business money.

    --
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    1. Re:Now let's do the same with money by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Nice quote from independance day.

      (do remember though that said movie is classified as "fiction")

  2. Shiny and beautiful... by Dilligent · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...but I fail to see the 3D that was promised by TFA.
    I agree it's a nice picture but there seems to be no explanation as to what these colours actually mean, let alone any kind of conclusion drawn from what I presume to be "pockets of dark matter".

    Anyone care to enlighten me?

    1. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by drizek · · Score: 1

      Every map needs to have a scale bar at the very least. We need something to tell us where this thing is and what all the colors mean. Also, there is nothing 3D about it.

    2. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by dakameleon · · Score: 4, Informative

      From TFA, the closest hint we get to the 3D nature:

      By combining the Hubble observations of gravitational lenses with spectroscopic red shift observations from telescopes on Earth, the 3D location of clumps of mass (dark matter, galaxies, black holes etc.) can be found. In this case, the white, cyan, and green regions are closer to Earth than those indicated in orange and red.

      but yes, the rest is pretty awful... it's just a starfield without any context with blotches of colour randomly scattered over it.

      --
      Man who leaps off cliff jumps to conclusion.
    3. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      X = X
      Y = Y
      Z = RGB

      FTFA: "the white, cyan, and green regions are closer to Earth than those indicated in orange and red."

    4. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      X = X
      Y = Y
      Z = RGB

      FTFA: "the white, cyan, and green regions are closer to Earth than those indicated in orange and red."

      but where is x and y in relation to 0,0,0?

    5. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 5, Informative

      ...but I fail to see the 3D that was promised by TFA.

      Yeah sadly it's the data that's 3D, not the presentation. They located the dark matter in three dimensions, the 3rd being distance according to red shift which is how it's colored. I can see how it's hard to find the explanation, too, what with them breaking up the story every couple paragraphs with a giant bold link to something else. I thought those were different news items at first!

      Bad presentation in the article aside, this is pretty amazing work. What a phenomenal instrument we have in Hubble.

      The article on the the Hubble site, while similarly lacking a good explanation for the image, actually talks about dark energy more than dark matter. Apparently this data also indicates a universe expanding outward from every point, corroborating that theory, along with some GR experimental validation as well. Not bad for a days work.

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      The enemies of Democracy are
    6. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I *think* hue is distance and intensity is concentration.

    7. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by insufflate10mg · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Look at it this way: if the RGB is 255,000,000 then its about 255,000,000 light years awhile. If the color is 000,000,255 consider it to be only around 255 light years away.

    8. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Dilligent · · Score: 1

      Heya, thanks for clearing that up, I really missed that part in the article, thanks in most part to the way it was structured. I guess this is the first time scientists were able to actually go from saying "There's dark matter 'somewhere'" to "Look at this data, we were able to indirectly locate some of it". Cool thing, it might just get us a step closer to understanding the whole subject better.

    9. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by carlzum · · Score: 3, Informative
      There are 3D dark matter maps out there. This map provides some context for someone on Earth.

      In this case, the white, cyan, and green regions are closer to Earth than those indicated in orange and red.

      The image doesn't really help me visualize the concept, but it attracted me to the article. That's probably the intent of these kind of images, grab people's attention and explain the findings when they want to know what the hell they're looking at.

    10. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by dwreid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You'll find much more complete information here. http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMZ6GSVYVE_index_0.html Unfortunately Discovery is the web site that turns science into an infomercial complete with annoying ads.

    11. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by pushing-robot · · Score: 1

      Wait, I thought the whole story was about someone getting a bunch of grant money to make a starfield without any context with blotches of colour randomly scattered over it.

      --
      How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
    12. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I guess this is the first time scientists were able to actually go from saying "There's dark matter 'somewhere'" to "Look at this data, we were able to indirectly locate some of it".

      They have been able to locate some of it before, just the scale here is unprecedented. It was previous discoveries of dark matter outside colliding galaxies that put dark matter well ahead of alternative explanations.

      Cool thing, it might just get us a step closer to understanding the whole subject better.

      Indeed.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    13. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Cryacin · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's just supposed to shed some light on dark matter.

      --
      Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
    14. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by pizza_milkshake · · Score: 1

      You need to wear these special glasses...

    15. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by neutralino · · Score: 1

      This image is based on the COSMOS survey. There's a better article about it here

    16. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by edumacator · · Score: 2, Funny

      ...but I fail to see the 3D that was promised by TFA.

      You have to stand about 3 feet away, and let your eyes go fuzzy. It's a cute picture of a unicorn.

    17. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by SlowGenius · · Score: 1

      Damn. There I was, thinking it was only a picture of Satan.

      --
      Listen to what I say, not what I mean...
    18. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      Ha ha ha ha. You dumb bastard. It's not a unicorn... it's a magical horse.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    19. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Your link was busted, had an @ at the end which I got too when trying to copy the link. :(

      But who cares about that! We've been searching for likely dark matter candidates in deep dark holes with ultra-sensitive detectors, when this whole time it's been posting to slashdot!

      Sorry couldn't resist. ;)

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    20. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by Xenophon+Fenderson, · · Score: 1

      Do yourself a favor and don't let that bastard of a horse talk you into making the "magical mayonnaise".

      --
      I'm proud of my Northern Tibetian Heritage
    21. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by CronicBurn · · Score: 1

      You just need those 3d glasses from Avatar. Works for me...

      --
      if I were able to see further, it was because I stood on the shoulders of Giants -Newton
    22. Re:Shiny and beautiful... by BillMike · · Score: 0

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  3. Zetarians? by actionbastard · · Score: 2

    The pic looks like the Zetarians.

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  4. FAKE by timmarhy · · Score: 2, Funny

    looks photoshopped to me

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    1. Re:FAKE by JustOK · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I can see uranus

      --
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    2. Re:FAKE by jo42 · · Score: 1

      Troll? Looks like a badly done Photoshop to me as well.

    3. Re:FAKE by Spad · · Score: 1

      Well, it is, technically. They didn't just save the pictures directly off Hubble and post them on the internet, you know.

  5. Could someone explain... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 0

    ...how they know it’s lensing, and that the stars aren’t just positioned like that?

    Sounds to me like you could never prove, which one it really is, until you fly behind that “dark matter”. (To me still a imaginary excuse, based on the arrogance of not being able to admit that the math is wrong, but instead calling the universe wrong! ^^ [But a good {and compact!} explanation will of course change my mind.])

    --
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    1. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I may be mistaken, but I think it's due to the parallax effect of the Earth moving around it's orbit that allows us to define the "true" positions of stars relative to ourselves.

    2. Re:Could someone explain... by Kratisto · · Score: 4, Informative

      You could do it based on movement speeds. Things in the background of an image move slower than those in the midground when you change your position--If the thing in the background, a galaxy or something, moves in a strange way, then you can be sure it's being lensed. I'm not sure if the Earth moves enough for this to be useful, though, given the scale.

      --
      Conscience is the inner voice which warns us that someone may be looking.
    3. Re:Could someone explain... by osgeek · · Score: 3, Interesting

      (To me still a imaginary excuse, based on the arrogance of not being able to admit that the math is wrong, but instead calling the universe wrong! ^^ [But a good {and compact!} explanation will of course change my mind.])

      That might be something similar to what they told Einstein when he used his math to explain characteristics of nature that no one had witnessed.

      I find the possibility of dark matter and energy kind of fascinating. Maybe it just a problem with their math - but then again, having huge amounts of mass in the universe be something other than what we experience every day adds a little mystery to it all.

    4. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Sorta. As the earth goes around the sun, we do in fact get enough parallax to determine the distance to nearby stars. On the galactic scale, though, this doesn't work. The way they find lensing artifacts is that lensing doesn't just skew a single flat image of what we see, it might bend the same light source so it comes at us from different angles, producing multiple images of a single event. Something like this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einstein_Cross

      If they have good enough images with spectral plots for each pixel (which if they are using redshift to determine distance, they must have), I could see an algorithm being able to pick out which images are mirages, and therefore where the lensing matter must be.

    5. Re:Could someone explain... by magsol · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not arrogance; frankly, a true scientist is thrilled at the prospect of being proved wrong. It means they're answering some long-standing questions and posing countless new ones. Furthermore, the concepts of "dark matter" and "dark energy" are still only theories; scientists have yet to definitively prove the existence of these entities. These theories just happen to be the best explanations for what scientists observe.

      The bottom line remains what osgeek above me said: it's easy for you to call the scientists who postulate dark matter "arrogant" considering it's something that has about as much impact on our daily lives as Einstein's Theory of Relativity does (which, when it was being proved, required very specific measurements to be taken, measurements that could only be gathered in a solar eclipse...how's that for completely unnecessary to quotidian life?).

      No, right now we can't definitively prove that the 3D image referenced in TFA is indeed dark matter. But within the parameters of the current hypothesized model, that is what scientists believe to be pockets of dark matter.

      --
      "I'd just like to emphasise that taking a million years isn't a metaphor here..." -Rich Bradshaw
    6. Re:Could someone explain... by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 4, Informative

      ...how they know it’s lensing, and that the stars aren’t just positioned like that?

      Sounds to me like you could never prove, which one it really is, until you fly behind that “dark matter”. (To me still a imaginary excuse, based on the arrogance of not being able to admit that the math is wrong, but instead calling the universe wrong! ^^ [But a good {and compact!} explanation will of course change my mind.])

      When you see multiple images of the same object, it's lensing. This is, in fact, how gravitational lensing was first discovered. Check out this great wikipedia image of the effect: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Einstein_cross.jpg. This is actually called strong lensing. TFA discusses weak lensing, which is a much smaller effect. That's detected by looking at very distant galaxies. Lensing changes the shape of galaxies such that there is a preferred orientation. If this orientation is statistically significant, i.e., too many galaxies are stretched in the same direction to be caused by normal physics, then it tells us that the weirdness is likely caused by lensing. Thanks to Hubble's ability to paint an incredibly dense picture of background galaxies, our statistics are based on a huge number of samples and we can trust them pretty thoroughly.

      Awesome, right?

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    7. Re:Could someone explain... by jazzPecq · · Score: 1

      There's a good explanation by Patricia Burchat in a TED talk: http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/patricia_burchat_leads_a_search_for_dark_energy.html

      If impatient, jump to 4:20 for how do they use lensing.

    8. Re:Could someone explain... by aniefer · · Score: 0

      Take the same picture twice, 6 months apart. The picture are from positions that are 2 AU apart. You can gain perspective by comparing these in the same way your brain compares images from your eyes.
      The red-shift tells you how far the star is. I'm not really sure on the details, but you should be able to compare the two images together with the red-shift derived distance to see if things don't quite add up.

    9. Re:Could someone explain... by techno-vampire · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Thanks to Hubble's ability to paint an incredibly dense picture of background galaxies, our statistics are based on a huge number of samples and we can trust them pretty thoroughly.

      I'll go farther than that: I can remember how before the Hubble was launched, scientists didn't think we'd ever actually be able to observe the effect because it was too small to be imaged from any ground-based telescope.

      --
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    10. Re:Could someone explain... by olsmeister · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. Also, gravitational lensing sometimes produces distinctive distortions and arcs.

    11. Re:Could someone explain... by pgn674 · · Score: 1

      ...how they know it’s lensing, and that the stars aren’t just positioned like that?

      I think it's because, in a perfectly flat space-time, only light that starts out coming directly at us will reach us. However, in our universe, heavy stuff can make light reach us that did not originally start coming at us. Also, when this bent light hits us, it appears to be coming from a direction that is not its true starting point.

      Now, here's the key: Two photons starting at a star going in slightly different directions can both reach us, due to the heavy stuff out there bending space-time. When they reach us, they appear to be coming from slightly different directions. If we can tell that both photons came from the same star, then we can calculate what heavy stuff made that gravitational lensing effect.

      Also, pretty pictures: Gravitational lens - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    12. Re:Could someone explain... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      ...how they know it's lensing, and that the stars aren't just positioned like that?

      Much like with regular lenses, there's more to it than just a change in apparent position.

      To me still a imaginary excuse, based on the arrogance of not being able to admit that the math is wrong, but instead calling the universe wrong! ^^ [But a good {and compact!} explanation will of course change my mind.]

      Once we discovered extra-galactic dark matter, it became really hard to find a different explanation. Coming up with a way to modify gravity to not need dark matter (but still explain everything "the math" explains perfectly) was hard enough. Once you had to modify gravity to not even point at the known center of mass, it kinda becomes unworkable.

      And people were trying to eliminate the need for dark matter! In contrast to this somewhat weird sounding definition of "arrogance", there are physicists around the globe who are arrogant enough to think that they're smarter than whoever came up with "the math", and they could be the ones to prove the theory wrong and present a new one. One that would be named after them.

      Or Newton again, in the case of MOND. It's still name-in-history(well, physics) books type stuff.

      Anyway, although gravitational lensing has plenty of evidence already, this data actually confirms another aspect of the predicted lensing effect and its relation to redshift, provides yet more evidence for dark matter, and even corroborates universal expansions. Multiple theories and predictions working in concert and completely consistent with observation. That's what you call a slam dunk. The game isn't over, but there's a reason this is the favored math at this point in time: it works.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    13. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      _its_, damn. _its_. Possessive. Stop raping the language.

    14. Re:Could someone explain... by syousef · · Score: 1

      You are mistaken. Parallax only works for nearby objects (basically the nearest stars).

      Here's how it was done:
      http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic1005.html

      Also look at each of the descriptions on the image links on the right hand side.

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    15. Re:Could someone explain... by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Informative

      "These theories just happen to be the best explanations for what scientists observe."

      Exactly! Dark matter and dark energy are just tags for unexplained phenomena that appear to have similar properties to matter and energy. They are not simply mathematical entities, they are phenomena that can be observed but cannot (yet) be explained with our mathematical models. This is no different to any other physics, Newton didn't discover gravity he discovered it could be described with maths.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    16. Re:Could someone explain... by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      how are we sure it's gravity producing the lensing effect and not some other force?

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    17. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I feel so violeted.

    18. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Yes. That's called parallax. Is measurable only in stars which are close by.

            * good out to 100 pc
              * only get 10% distances out to a few parsecs.
              * only a few hundred stars are this close

      http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pogge/Ast162/Unit1/distances.html

    19. Re:Could someone explain... by Lloyd_Bryant · · Score: 1

      how are we sure it's gravity producing the lensing effect and not some other force?

      Because gravity is the only force we know that is capable of doing so.

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I had one once. It sucked.
    20. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Well, if the language doesn't want to be raped it shouldn't wear such a short skirt.

    21. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a very good question. Other respectable scientists got a different theory: it was the Flying Spaghetti Monster that oriented the galaxies in certain directions, as it plowed through deep space.

    22. Re:Could someone explain... by MoralHazard · · Score: 2, Funny

      The language was asking for it.

    23. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ">> how they know it’s lensing, and that the stars aren’t just positioned like that?

      > When you see multiple images of the same object, it's lensing"

      More fundamentally: observations on cosmological lensing do not involve stars but entire galaxies.

      Patterns of distortion of the shapes of galaxies due to lensing are pretty much unmistakable.
      http://www.nasa.gov/images/content/211728main_young_bright_lg.jpg

    24. Re:Could someone explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll go farther than that: I can remember how before the Hubble was launched, scientists didn't think we'd ever actually be able to observe the effect because it was too small to be imaged from any ground-based telescope.

      And now they use lasers to correct for atmospheric distortion. I think I heard that ground based telescopes have better resolving power than Hubble. Of course resolving power isn't the only reason to get Hubble above the atmosphere. There's lots of interesting stuff that is absorbed by air.

    25. Re:Could someone explain... by BillMike · · Score: 0

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  6. Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...especially when you consider it's a picture of something that very possibly doesn't even exist.

    There isn't any "scale bar" because you are not looking at something at any fixed distance! You are looking at (theoretically) blobs of stuff at various distances.

    1. Re:Nice pretty picture by Abcd1234 · · Score: 5, Informative

      ...especially when you consider it's a picture of something that very possibly doesn't even exist.

      It exists. Educate yourself.

    2. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Thanks. It's worth noting that the Bullet Cluster results you linked to are only the most recent development in dark matter's nearly 80 year history:

      1933 - Zwicky studies the Coma cluster of galaxies and is surprised to find that these galaxies are orbiting each other much faster than he predicted based on their visible mass. He proposes that each galaxy actually contains much more mass than is visible.

      1959 - Measurements of galactic rotational velocities conflict with expected velocities based on the amount of matter observed to be present. The dark matter concept proposed by Zwicky is found to solve this problem too.

      1970s - Big Bang nucleosynthesis has trouble reconciling observations of high deuterium density with the expansion rate of the universe. Non-baryonic dark matter solves this problem as well.

      At this point, dark matter was simply an hypothesis. MOdified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) was another hypothesis with equal weight. But then in 2006 measurements of the Bullet Cluster supported the dark matter hypothesis over the MOND hypothesis.

      Simultaneously, WMAP (2001-present) measured the microwave background radiation and independently confirmed the existence of dark matter. It also revealed an even larger amount of "dark energy" which confirmed the 1998 discovery that the expansion of the universe is accelerating.

    3. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Call ya and raise ya one - http://www.holoscience.com/news.php?article=74fgmwne

      Dark matter - ahhh, pull yer head out! Get the hell out of the fairy dust and pixie magic astronomy dept and get your ass down to the IEEE who actually have an idea of whats really going on

    4. Re:Nice pretty picture by Metabolife · · Score: 1

      Educate yourself. It's still just a theory.

    5. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Exactly! That's the same reason I'm a creationist: evolution is also still just a theory. I'm also not fooled by their lies that the world is more than 6000 years old, because all those physicists have are silly theories to back up their ridiculous zillions of years nonsense (or whatever the age is this week!). I support you 100%. The high priests of this "godless science" religion need to be removed from the pedastal they're sitting on!

    6. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, if you want good science, ask an engineer. It's amazing how often engineers point out obvious problems with evolution, which the so-called "scientists" just ignore!

    7. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like the professor Mendel sent his papers to, who ignored them because they contradicted the current theory.

    8. Re:Nice pretty picture by socheres · · Score: 1

      where are my mod points when i need them....
      anyway, i guess people cannot be forced to think it through with their own heads man.
      this dark matter-black hole nonsense is so stupid that i can't imagine how people who otherwise have an extended vocabulary and generally present signs of intelligence still can suck that stuff up and not throw up...
      we are stupid and religious. i hate humans.

    9. Re:Nice pretty picture by Kentari · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So are Relativity and Quantum Mechanics.

      You say "theory" as if it's a bad thing, while it's the highest you can hope to achieve in science.

    10. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not think it means what you think it means...

    11. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Educate yourself. It's still just a hypothesis.

      In science, "just a theory" is as good as it gets.

    12. Re:Nice pretty picture by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      So you think the Universe cannot go beyond the bounds you can easily imagine? That it can't contain anything new and fascinating?

      In what way is dark matter stranger than quantum physics or relativity, except for the fact that we've had about a century to get used to those?

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    13. Re:Nice pretty picture by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      get your ass down to the IEEE who actually have an idea of whats really going on

      LOL.

      Yeah right. The IEEE know that Electric Universe is a bunch of horesshit, because they understand how electromagnetism actually works, which cannot be said of any of the EU idiots. EU proposes that the solar wind - which is a quasi-neutral plasma consisting of equal amounts of positively and negatively changed particles -- is created by an electric field emanating from the sun.

      Q.E.D. They're idiots.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    14. Re:Nice pretty picture by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      So is gravity. Coincidently, they're using the theory of gravity to support the theory of dark matter.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    15. Re:Nice pretty picture by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      At this point, dark matter was simply an hypothesis. MOdified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND [umd.edu]) was another hypothesis with equal weight. But then in 2006 measurements of the Bullet Cluster supported the dark matter hypothesis over the MOND hypothesis.

      I don't think you could really say MOND had equal weight until 2006. I got my physics degree in the late 80's/early 90's and while MOND was often mentioned along with dark matter, it was usually as a footnote of other possiblities. Very few considered it a serious contender as it was complicated and failed to describe all but ideal models. Physicists like elegant physics which is the ability of simple equations to describe a complex situations. MOND required complex equations to describe simple situations.

    16. Re:Nice pretty picture by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>It exists.

      What are it's properties then? All we've observed are anomalies in gravity and space-time. Positing some mysterious form of invisible matter isn't an explanation at all - all we still know is that there's these weird things going on with gravity and spacetime, and that our current theories are incomplete.

    17. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should educate yourself.

      You present as evidence exactly the same sort of imaging techniques that were used to make the image in question? That's really lame.

      That's like trying to prove that a photograph of a ghost is real by producing more photographs of the ghost. Hint: it doesn't work.

      There are alternative theories, such as MoND, that might explain this (since it explains the apparent gravitational anomalies in spiral galaxies, it is possible that it could explain this kind of gravitational anomaly equally as well). Most "evidence" I have seen that is supposed to support the Dark Matter theory tends to also support the alternative theories. So while the "evidence" does indicate that something strange is going on, exactly which strange thing it may be is far from decided.

    18. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      However, just this last year it was found that prior surveys of background radiation had missed the mark widely. Further, there is strong new evidence contradicting the assumption that we are in a "typical" region of the universe, simultaneously calling into question whether expansion is actually accelerating.

      Gotta keep up with the news, man!

    19. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Like the professor Mendel sent his papers to, who ignored them because they contradicted the current theory."

      Why was this modded down? Mendel was in fact ignored, for decades, and the primary reason was that his ideas conflicted with mainstream theory!

    20. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I would like to add that, as some have mentioned above, there is recent evidence that appears to support the dark matter theory over the alternatives, but there is also evidence even more recently that the other evidence was in error. So... all I am saying is that this "debate" is not yet decided. Wait and see.

    21. Re:Nice pretty picture by mschuyler · · Score: 1

      Actually, Mendel may have cheated, or his assistant may have arranged the results to match what he knew Mendel wanted. The problem is that, statistically speaking, Mendel's results are too good to be true. There is some controversy about this. I'm not taking sides--just pointing it out, e.g. http://www.ayubmed.edu.pk/JAMC/PAST/19-3/22%20Faraz.pdf

      --
      How about a moderation of -1 pedantic.
    22. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, just this last year it was found that prior surveys of background radiation had missed the mark widely.

      Huh? What "mark" did WMAP or COBE miss widely? Says who?

      Further, there is strong new evidence contradicting the assumption that we are in a "typical" region of the universe, simultaneously calling into question whether expansion is actually accelerating.

      WTF? The 1998 supernovae measurements I cited were measured over billions of light years, and have been confirmed by more recent measurements with higher precision. They're confirmed by WMAP's measurements of the background radiation, which encompasses nearly the entire observable universe. They're also confirmed by Chandra data of galaxy clusters.

    23. Re:Nice pretty picture by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      You present as evidence exactly the same sort of imaging techniques that were used to make the image in question? That's really lame.

      No it isn't. It's incontrovertible evidence. Or do you have proof that the methodology is faulty (despite the results agreeing with other sorts of data, such as WMAP)?

      There are alternative theories, such as MoND, that might explain this

      No, there aren't. Even MOND proponents have admitted that *some* form of weakly interacting matter is *required* to explain the galaxy collision results. Seriously, get your learn on, your information is *way* out of date.

      Most "evidence" I have seen that is supposed to support the Dark Matter theory tends to also support the alternative theories.

      No, it really doesn't. Seriously. Learn a little before making yourself sound like a fool. Here, I'll even help you:

      The leading relativistic MOND theory, proposed by Jacob Bekenstein in 2004 is called TeVeS for Tensor-Vector-Scalar and solves many of the problems of earlier attempts. However, a study in August 2006 reported an observation of a pair of colliding galaxy clusters whose behavior, it was claimed, was not compatible with any current modified gravity theories.[27] In 2007, John W. Moffat proposed a theory of modified gravity (MOG) based on the Nonsymmetric Gravitational Theory (NGT) that claims to account for the behavior of colliding galaxies.[59] This theory still requires the presence of non-relativistic neutrinos (another candidate for (cold) dark matter) to work.

    24. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Nothing is incontrovertible. That's one of those words that, when you hear it, you should probably run away.

      If you had bothered to read my other comments, you might have found out something yourself.

      And yes, other than this, which does appear (without having researched it fully) to support the existence of dark matter, most of the evidence I have seen that was supposedly "evidence of dark matter" was pretty equally evidence of some of the alternative theories. Just how much do you know about the evidence I have seen anyway? You seem to believe you are an expert on the matter.

    25. Re:Nice pretty picture by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      If you had bothered to read my other comments, you might have found out something yourself.

      I've read those comments. None of them appear to provide any evidence to either invalidate these and related findings, or provide a mechanism by which MOND or other theories could be altered to fit current observations.

      Just how much do you know about the evidence I have seen anyway? You seem to believe you are an expert on the matter.

      Well, judging by your comments, you certainly are. So, please, explain to me how the Bullet Cluster and galaxy collision results (among other things) can be explained by MOND. And once you've done that, please, publish a paper, as I'm sure the physics community will be very interested to hear about your findings given that actual experts on the topic can't seem to manage it.

    26. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but that is a different matter. It has little to nothing to do with whether his theories were essentially accurate, or why they were ignored.

    27. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1
      Oops... I forgot a couple of things:

      No it isn't. It's incontrovertible evidence. Or do you have proof that the methodology is faulty (despite the results agreeing with other sorts of data, such as WMAP)?

      It is nothing of the sort. You may know a lot about current physics but you obviously know squat about logic and evidence. You offered the wikipedia link as evidence that OP's picture is correct... yet they used exactly the same techniques (having to do with gravitational lensing) to produce the pictures. Therefore you can't use one as evidence of the veracity of the other. That's just plain stupid. For someone as smart as you present yourself to be, how can you present that as "evidence" of the veracity of the other picture (which is what I was referring to), and call that "incontrovertible"? It really is a downright stupid thing to do.

      I suppose it could be that you were confusing that with how "incontrovertible" you see the evidence for dark matter to be... but those are two different things. Regardless, the fact is that in science, it is usually those who go around claiming things like "incontrovertible" that end up eating their words.

      Since you appear to have set yourself up here as knowledgeable about the subject, I am curious about something: since dark matter has to be strongly interacting enough to account for the anomalies observed in the rotation of galaxies (which is why it is presumed to be the majority of the gravitationally-interacting mass in the universe), how does that fit with the gravitation that we observe locally, in our solar system? And please don't try to tell me that the gravitational interaction is too weak to notice on that scale, because if it did, then it would not have the requisite effect on galaxies, either. (If it interacted on weakly gravitationally, then there would have to be even more of it to have the observed large-scale effects, so that's not an answer.)

    28. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      You still aren't getting the point, are you? Hmph. Well, I will try again: I was referring to evidence that I HAVE SEEN. Perhaps there is lots of other evidence. You seem to believe so. But that's beside the point. And yes, in fact I do know quite a bit about the evidence that I have seen.

      Your supposed expertise in physics aside, you seem to need reading and logic lessons.

    29. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... since dark matter has to be strongly interacting enough to account for the anomalies observed in the rotation of galaxies (which is why it is presumed to be the majority of the gravitationally-interacting mass in the universe), how does that fit with the gravitation that we observe locally, in our solar system?

      The key is that most dark matter candidates don't strongly interact, as shown by the Bullet Cluster observations. In fact, that's what WIMP stands for: Weakly Interacting Massive Particle. Since dark matter only interacts via gravity, it only clumps together on the largest scales of galaxies; at the scale of individual solar systems most WIMP candidates should have a fairly uniform density. Depending on whether we're dealing with cold or hot dark matter, clumping may occur at scales smaller than galaxies but to the best of my knowledge this hasn't been confirmed experimentally.

      As a result, there's no net gravitational effect on scales at which dark matter is essentially uniformly dense. This conclusion follows from reasoning very similar to the famous sophomore-level physics problem where one proves that gravity inside a hollow uniform sphere is identically zero.

    30. Re:Nice pretty picture by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      And yet, for all that you know about the evidence that you have seen, you still haven't explained how MOND or other alternatives to dark matter can explain the results that I've cited, results which are accepted by most of the physics community as supporting dark matter while ruling out MOND. I mean, it's not like you can just cherrypick the results to fit your theory. You gotta explain them all.

      So please, if you have citations or other references which explain how MOND can be altered to fit the latest results (the galaxy collision results, in particular, are difficult for MOND, as they show weak lensing where no visible matter is present, which is tough to explain when the basis of your theory is to alter how gravity works, given that gravity requires, you know, matter), I'd be curious to see them, because, at least AFAICT, it's just not possible unless you allow for *some* form of dark matter.

    31. Re:Nice pretty picture by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      See the AC. He explains it very nicely, so I won't bother.

      Honestly, how stupid do you think physicists are? They came up with the idea of dark matter *specifically* to deal with galactic rotational curves. You really don't think they put a little thought into local effects? Please...

      This is just classic Slashdotter arrogance. You somehow think you've achieved a brilliant insight that people who've spent decades specializing in the field somehow failed to notice.

    32. Re:Nice pretty picture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly, how stupid do you think physicists are?

      Aside from this nonsensical outburst, her sympathy for 9/11 truthers, GMO fearmongers and climate change contrarians probably means she's wondering how physicists manage to walk and breathe simultaneously.

      She's likely suffering from a case of the Dunning-Kruger effect. I can't think of any other reason why she would write these arrogant posts without ever noting that "IANAP" like most honest slashdotters do. The fact that her original post is currently at +4 Insightful chills me to the bone: apparently some people can't distinguish scientists from programmers who use "sciencey" buzzwords while regurgitating a "teach the controversy" argument on roughly the same intellectual level as the ones pioneered by tobacco companies and the Discovery Institute (e.g. the wedge document).

    33. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Sure, I can find out. And I will. But I asked you, and you couldn't or wouldn't answer.

    34. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      By the way, I just wanted to mention, since you seem so adamant about this: I did not assert or even imply that I thought physicists would not have considered the issue. That would be stupid. I simply asked you a polite question.

    35. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1
      Hi, AC! I see you were modded down, and probably rightfully so, but I chose to answer anyway. Isn't life grand? :0)

      Aside from this nonsensical outburst, her sympathy for 9/11 truthers, GMO fearmongers and climate change contrarians probably means she's wondering how physicists manage to walk and breathe simultaneously.

      Hmm. First, you seem to have taken an inordinate interest in me. Why is that? Especially considering how often you seem to disagree. Is it possible I have an evil stalker? Why else would he hide under an AC?

      Second, a simple question is a "nonsensical outburst"? That's interesting. I wonder how you would judge an actual rant. I see you are very emotional. About some of the silliest things, too.

      For example, that 9/11 issue you linked to? Guess what? All I said was that not all the evidence was nonsense. In response, the guy went on and on about a lot of evidence that -- I am sure most all of use would agree -- IS nonsense. Which had nothing to do with the statement I made, or the evidence I was referring to, at all. In fact he didn't even wait to bother to find out what evidence I meant before attempting to attack it.

      In regard to the GMO study I cited there, he (ChromeAeonium) at first tried to claim that it was not a peer-reviewed paper. Without any evidence to indicate that, I might add. Later, he stated that he was not familiar with the journal at all. Which is an admission that his earlier statements were outright lies, and in fact he could have corrected that ignorance in a mere few seconds with Google. In fact, it was peer-reviewed paper, in a respected peer-reviewed publication. So it is up to you to refute that solid, peer-reviewed evidence on GMO corn, rather than snidely calling me "sympathetic to GMO fearmongers". My evidence is real, where is yours?

      I could go on, but I won't bother. If you don't stop harassing me, however, eventually I will find out who you are, AC or not.

    36. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      My, you do go on, don't you?

      If you read more of my statements, not just the one you have been obsessed with, you will see that I was not saying that MoND could explain this... simply that (I am repeating myself here) most of the evidence that I have seen does support alternate theories at least as well as dark matter. I have already stated (as you would know, if you had actually been reading) that it might not apply here.

      All I have said here, given the whole of my statements, is that -- contrary to your opinion -- I do not believe that "the jury is in" quite yet. But without contrary evidence I grant you -- for the moment -- this evidence. But in my experience the attitude that "the jury is in" and all is decided is more often mistaken than not.

      Are you satisfied? Or are you still intent on arguing about nothing?

      Also, at least at first, you misunderstood my comments about using one picture to verify the other. I wasn't disputing the physics, I was simply commenting that you can't use a given technique to validate itself. As an analogy, suppose you were using a particular technique involving photographic film to capture images from radiation, and somebody disputed the validity of your technique. Well, you can't just go take a bunch more pictures using that same technique, getting the same results, and call that evidence of its validity. Rather, the validity has to be determined experimentally or at the very least inductively.

      Therefore, your one picture does not validate the technique used to generate the other, as you appeared to be claiming. And there is not as yet enough other evidence to verify it either experimentally or inductively.

      You asked me if I could prove that the methodology was faulty, but that is disingenuous. The fact is that (regarding just the pictures) your "evidence" was next to meaningless as evidence that it wasn't.

      Make no mistake. I am not disputing any physics here. All I am saying is that the one picture is not evidence that the other one is valid... even though I think they probably are.

    37. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think I already know, but we shall see. If I am correct, I have asked you politely before to leave me alone. But I am losing my patience and do not promise politeness in the future. Considering how often you have been wrong, I wouldn't push it if I were you.

    38. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      The key is that most dark matter candidates don't strongly interact, as shown by the Bullet Cluster observations. In fact, that's what WIMP stands for: Weakly Interacting Massive Particle. Since dark matter only interacts via gravity, it only clumps together on the largest scales of galaxies; at the scale of individual solar systems most WIMP candidates should have a fairly uniform density. Depending on whether we're dealing with cold or hot dark matter, clumping may occur at scales smaller than galaxies but to the best of my knowledge this hasn't been confirmed experimentally. As a result, there's no net gravitational effect on scales at which dark matter is essentially uniformly dense. This conclusion follows from reasoning very similar to the famous sophomore-level physics problem where one proves that gravity inside a hollow uniform sphere is identically zero.

      Makes perfect sense to me.

      Why was this modded down?

    39. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      My mistake. I was thinking microwaves, but it was gamma rays.

    40. Re:Nice pretty picture by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      Makes perfect sense to me.

      Thanks. I think this would've been impossible if I'd logged in.

      Why was this modded down?

      It wasn't. Starting scores for users and ACs are different.

    41. Re:Nice pretty picture by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      As you say, unidentified gamma ray sources aren't relevant to the galaxy collision observations or dark energy acceleration observations in question. You've demonstrated true scientific spirit here by admitting a mistake. Kudos.

    42. Re:Nice pretty picture by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I don't have any problem admitting I am wrong, if I am convinced that I am wrong.

      Unfortunately, sometimes people are so taken up with their confidence in their own knowledge that they don't read carefully, and think they are arguing about something that nobody is really arguing with them about. I have had that occur quite a few times here on slashdot.

      I may not be a physicist, but I do expect logic and reasoning when I am discussing an issue with somebody, and I don't think physicists should be excused from that basic requirement merely because of their position.

    43. Re:Nice pretty picture by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      I finished undergrad in 2004, and my experience was similar to yours. I was being overly conciliatory to MOND because in my experience non-physicists aren't swayed by issues of elegance and simplicity.

    44. Re:Nice pretty picture by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      Hi, AC! I see you were modded down, and probably rightfully so, but I chose to answer anyway. Isn't life grand? :0)

      Ditto.

      I simply asked you a polite question. ... a simple question is a "nonsensical outburst"? That's interesting. I wonder how you would judge an actual rant. ...

      No, you didn't "simply ask a polite question." You went on a rude, nonsensical rant. Let's review:

      Nice pretty picture... especially when you consider it's a picture of something that very possibly doesn't even exist. [Jane Q. Public, Sunday March 28, @07:10PM]

      This comment is similar to all the other crackpots in this thread who dispute modern physics which clearly shows that some amount of some kind of dark matter exists.

      It exists. Educate yourself. [Abcd1234, Sunday March 28, @07:44PM]

      Abcd1234 clearly assumed you were expressing support for MOND, and helpfully linked impressive evidence which convinced many physicists that dark matter explains the evidence better than MOND. Then I chimed in:

      ... Measurements of galactic rotational velocities conflict with expected velocities based on the amount of matter observed to be present. ... At this point, dark matter was simply an hypothesis. MOdified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND [umd.edu]) was another hypothesis with equal weight. But then in 2006 measurements of the Bullet Cluster supported the dark matter hypothesis over the MOND hypothesis ... [Dumb Scientist, Sunday March 28, @07:57PM]

      The next day:

      ... There are alternative theories, such as MoND, that might explain this (since it explains the apparent gravitational anomalies in spiral galaxies, it is possible that it could explain this kind of gravitational anomaly equally as well). Most "evidence" I have seen that is supposed to support the Dark Matter theory tends to also support the alternative theories. ... [Jane Q. Public, Monday March 29, @12:28PM]

      You present as evidence exactly the same sort of imaging techniques that were used to make the image in question? That's really lame. ... You offered the wikipedia link as evidence that OP's picture is correct... yet they used exactly the same techniques (having to do with gravitational lensing) to produce the pictures. Therefore you can't use one as evidence of the veracity of the other. [Jane Q. Public]

      Nonsense. You made what sounded like a general statement about dark matter "very possibly" not even existing, which implies that physicists who overwhelmingly do think it exists are either incompetent or suffering from frequent hallucinations. The only reasonable objection to dark matter was MOND, and the Bullet Cluster presented very strong evidence that seems to rule out MOND with no dark matter. It's not "exactly the same technique" as the current survey because the main point of the Bullet Clust

  7. My little pony by A3gis · · Score: 2, Funny

    looks like a My Little Pony pegasus got up there and jizzed all over the lens...

    1. Re:My little pony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where d'you get you pony?

    2. Re:My little pony by shoehornjob · · Score: 1

      lmfao only a truly sick person could see that.my compliments to you sir.

      --
      "We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
  8. Meat, Not Dessert by DynaSoar · · Score: 0

    Any off the wall collection of data up through true random can be used to "make" a pretty pictur, since the picture is actually made by people and therefore made pretty by them. This does nothing but make eye candy.

    What's the results? What's the implications? Where does this put the current pro/con dark energy argument, not to mention the recent 'discovery' of 10 times more baryonic matter than we had seen previously? Nobody has yet satisfactorily explained how that other matter was already known about since to know it in the absence of EM detection meant gravity detection, and you can't tell "dark" baryonic gravity from dark matter gravity from dark energy gravity.

    All pretty pictures, more questions and fewer answers. This is not what we're paying them for.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  9. Maybe, but not very promising by neophytepwner · · Score: 1

    Lensing is known to happen with black holes and other massive bodies how does this map distinguish dark matter from other sources of lensing? By stating Dark matter has no interaction with electromagnetic radiation clearly contradicts the support that it also bends light. Unless "interaction" has a separate astrophysical meaning which is unfamiliar to me. I don't see how this gets us any closer to understanding the nature of dark matter/energy.

    1. Re:Maybe, but not very promising by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Informative

      how does this map distinguish dark matter from other sources of lensing?

      IANAAstrophysicist, but my understanding is that a point source, such as a black hole, would create a strong lensing effect. These observations are of a weak lensing effect that indicates a diffuse source of gravity.

      By stating Dark matter has no interaction with electromagnetic radiation clearly contradicts the support that it also bends light.

      The dark matter doesn't bend light. The gravity from the dark matter bends light.

    2. Re:Maybe, but not very promising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      By stating Dark matter has no interaction with electromagnetic radiation clearly contradicts the support that it also bends light. Unless "interaction" has a separate astrophysical meaning which is unfamiliar to me.

      From TFA: "However, we cannot directly measure the stuff as it doesn't interact with electromagnetic radiation (i.e. it doesn't emit or reflect any light)..."

      There's no contradiction. Dark matter doesn't emit, absorb, or reflect light. It only interacts with normal matter (and other dark matter) via gravity. Gravity also bends light, as demonstrated in 1919 and repeatedly since then.

    3. Re:Maybe, but not very promising by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      I'm only a layman, but here's my guess: although Dark Matter doesn't directly interact with electromagnetic radiation, the gravity caused by its mass warps space just like all other gravity, and that warpage bends light.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    4. Re:Maybe, but not very promising by nadaou · · Score: 2, Informative

      By stating Dark matter has no interaction with electromagnetic radiation clearly contradicts the support that it also bends light.

      The dark matter doesn't bend light. The gravity from the dark matter bends light.

      or put another way, the dark matter doesn't bend light -- it bends space. (!)

      --
      ~.~
      I'm a peripheral visionary.
  10. That explains.... by tpstigers · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... the disturbance I felt in the Force earlier. I thought I just had gas.

  11. Cool picture! by Tomfrh · · Score: 3, Funny

    So luminiferous and aethereal! Almost magical like!

    1. Re:Cool picture! by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      So, are you trolling, or are you really not aware that the jury is in and that dark matter has been confirmed (and more importantly, that MOND without any kind of weakly interacting matter has been ruled out)?

    2. Re:Cool picture! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And, the jury was in on luminiferous aether, too, for a time. Then scientists realized they were wrong. That's allegedly the great thing about Science; we can be wrong and admit it. I submit that Dark Mater is the luminiferous aether of our time.

  12. OK, who was holding their fist in front of Hubble? by pidge-nz · · Score: 1

    Or is my pattern-recognition generating a false positive?

  13. "Found" galaxies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems I read recently about how observations of distant galaxies were hampered by the wavelength of light being sought- that they were so far away and so redshifted that when astronomers finally looked for the right wavelength, zillions more were found. What I wondered at the time was what this might do to dark matter calculations- if a large amount of matter in the universe simply wasn't being observed because we weren't looking for it the right way until recently, even with our decades-old tech which eventually found it, is it possible that dark matter is simply regular matter not observed correctly? Like you think there are no bowling balls in the room because you're looking at the ceiling?

    1. Re:"Found" galaxies by Lithdren · · Score: 1

      As was stated in that artical itself, and many times in the comments, that had no effect on the theory of dark matter. What they found were galaxies they knew had to be there, but they couldn't see. We found a 10 fold increase in the number of visible galaxies. This doesn't answer anything about Dark Matter, where the gravitational behaivor of galaxies doesn't seem to match the visible mass they contain. All we did was find more examples to review for the theory of Dark Matter, not dark matter itself.

  14. Every map needs to have a scale bar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every map needs to have a scale bar at the very least. We need something to tell us where this thing is and what all the colors mean. Also, there is nothing 3D about it.Chinese Girls vs Japanese Girls

  15. Isn't Dark Matter passé? by WH44 · · Score: 1

    There was this recent article on a popular news site for geeks - ah, here it is: 90% of Universe Found Hiding in Plain View.

    1. Re:Isn't Dark Matter passé? by largesnike · · Score: 2, Informative
      I know this is slashdot, but you could try RTFA that that article links to...

      "I'll note: this has nothing to do with dark matter. As it happens, 90% of the matter in the Universe is in a form that emits no light, but affects other matter through gravity. We know it exists ... locally, in nearby galaxies and clusters of galaxies, too. This new result doesn't affect that, since the now un-hidden galaxies are very far away, like many billions of light years away. They can't possibly affect nearby galaxies, so they don't account for dark matter."

      --
      "Laugh while you can a-monkey boy!" - Dr Emilio Lizardo
    2. Re:Isn't Dark Matter passé? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that the article says "this has nothing to do with dark matter" twice...

    3. Re:Isn't Dark Matter passé? by WH44 · · Score: 1
      You're right. I only read half the article and missed the note (I think the note currently at the top was not there the first time I read it - I would have noticed).

      While I've got someone who knows what they're talking about: do you know where I can get the raw data and/or the precise methods used in various astronomy articles? Most of these simplified articles never mention compensation for gravitomagnetic effects, and it was found a few years back, that gravitomagnetism is, at least in some cases, considerably stronger than expected.

  16. But just the other day... by lordmetroid · · Score: 1

    Just the other day there was an article about finding the remaining 90% of the universe that was previously missing by simply looking at the frequency spectra associated to hydrogen. Showing a whole lot of more galaxies than what previously was seen.

    1. Re:But just the other day... by largesnike · · Score: 1
      ...and for you too

      "I'll note: this has nothing to do with dark matter. As it happens, 90% of the matter in the Universe is in a form that emits no light, but affects other matter through gravity. We know it exists ... locally, in nearby galaxies and clusters of galaxies, too. This new result doesn't affect that, since the now un-hidden galaxies are very far away, like many billions of light years away. They can't possibly affect nearby galaxies, so they don't account for dark matter."

      This was from the article in that story to which you refer. I just quoted this for someone immediately above you.

      --
      "Laugh while you can a-monkey boy!" - Dr Emilio Lizardo
  17. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually, it does exist. Frankly, I'm fucking sick of posting the same links over and over, so why don't you just go to Wikipedia and read about the Bullet Cluster. There is simply no question, now, even among MOND proponents: there is weakly interacting matter out there, and we have no idea what it is.

  18. Old news? by dido · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I actually submitted a story on this exact same topic back in 2007. The only thing new they seem to have now is a nicer picture, the article seems much lighter than the original article I linked to three years ago. The new article doesn't seem to indicate any new science that has developed since then, not even links or mentions of any new publications updating the findings in 2007, or even mentions of the scientists who are behind this work...

    --
    Qu'on me donne six lignes écrites de la main du plus honnête homme, j'y trouverai de quoi le faire pendre.
  19. To quote 2001 ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my God! It's full of stars!

  20. Here's the explanation by syousef · · Score: 1
    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  21. More on how it was done by syousef · · Score: 1

    And a little more about how they did it:

    http://www.spacetelescope.org/images/html/heic1005c.html

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  22. Re:OK, who was holding their fist in front of Hubb by BehrA · · Score: 1

    I agree to a point. Its either a fist or a chicken, a duck and swan and a dolphin are flying in front of the camera.

  23. Whoa trippy... by phaet0n · · Score: 1

    Space is so far out man!

  24. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Torodung · · Score: 1

    It's the aether, of course. =^)

    --
    Toro

  25. Goofy Crap by thelikeableasshole · · Score: 1

    This is one of the lamest things I have ever seen. OMG is this a joke or what!? If these guys are serious someone needs to pull the plug on these assholes before someone gets hurt. Check out thunderolts.info or read "The Big Bang Never Happened" But for gods' sake don't eat this shit sandwich!

  26. Star Trek TOS by rsborg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it me, or did that pic give anyone else a TOS flashback where they meet some energy-based alien that fucks with the ship?

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    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    1. Re:Star Trek TOS by barfy · · Score: 1

      YES!!!!

    2. Re:Star Trek TOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OMG Yes :)

    3. Re:Star Trek TOS by wcbsd · · Score: 1

      Anyone else notice that this looks quite a bit like the prototypical "Alien Face" as described here:
      http://www.technovelgy.com/ct/Science-Fiction-News.asp?NewsNum=496

    4. Re:Star Trek TOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I came here to post exactly this.

    5. Re:Star Trek TOS by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

      We have no reason to hate humans!

  27. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

    "Within a few decades it will be proven that neither dark matter nor dark energy exists; they're just hypotheses to fill the gaps between the observed behavior of the universe and our current understanding of the laws of physics."

    Dark energy/matter are the names of the observed phenomena just as energy/matter are names for similar phenomena. If they are (as you claim) the names of specific hypotheses then what are the phenomena called?

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  28. Could it be that dark matter.... by Tanuki64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...is totally normal matter, but invisible for us because it is located in another universe? I am not a physicist so my idea might be totally wacko, but ages ago I watched the BBC documentation 'The elegant universe'. One of the string theories explained there proposed that the reason gravity is so weak compared to other major forces is that the 'strings', which are responsible for gravity have the ability to migrate into parallel universes. Therefore we always feel only a fraction of the gravity mass 'produces'. <--- Please be lenient with my very unscientific wording. :-)

    So when I saw this documentation I always wondered, when 'our' gravity migrates into other universes, shouldn't also migrate gravity from other universes into ours? I wondered if this theory was true, how would a black hole in a parallel universe look like here?

    So maybe, if we had the ability to fly to those places where hubble located the 'dark matter', we would find nothing. The space is curved there for no apparent reason. It is actually because of normal matter in a parallel universe.

    1. Re:Could it be that dark matter.... by tulcod · · Score: 1

      Please stick to programming.

    2. Re:Could it be that dark matter.... by khayman80 · · Score: 1

      The only other person to respond to you was too harsh. Your idea is "out there" and probably wrong, but it's not obviously wrong. It's even an interesting thought experiment. The same thing occurred to me during my undergrad in 2004, and the story is here. Long story short: normal matter in parallel universes wouldn't explain the Bullet cluster observations mentioned elsewhere on this page.

  29. Citation by headkase · · Score: 1

    Sorry it was a $640 toilet seat and a $436 hammer. Where do you think Independence Day got the kernel of truth from? Source: Here. Anybody with a grain of sense knows they were slush funds, I'm sure today that money still flows around its just not as well accounted for as a $436 hammer ;)

    --
    Shh.
    1. Re:Citation by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      You may be right, but I'm still not okay with the insinuation given. Defense is, unfortunately, not (anymore) in the top 3 government expenses.

      I wonder what kind of toilet seats they have in the unemployment offices, or medicare centers (or are only Obama's czars entitled to superior ass-wipes ? Someone ought to check it). Lots of money disappears there, and we all know it's not going to unemployed people, docters or patients.

      Or perhaps Darwin is right ... of course that would mean that the number of unemployed people is going to expand indefinitely, until it breaks the back of the government, after which famine and crime will take care of unemployment a few months at most.

  30. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, I can link to wikipedia too.

    In astronomy and cosmology, dark matter is a conjectured form of matter...

  31. anyone remember nasa fake color maps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the most important thing may be that this is dishonest in the sense that the colors give a psychological impression that is misleading - the deltas in the dark matter are probably small, so the colorization gives a misleading impression

  32. Just a nitpick on relativity and normal life by aepervius · · Score: 1

    "as much impact on our daily lives as Einstein's Theory of Relativity does " You need relativity correction for guidance system like GPS. So chance is, even relativity has an impact on the GP live.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  33. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  34. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by radtea · · Score: 1

    And yet the very notion of "non-baryonic matter" challenges laws as fundamental and thoroughly-established as laws of gravitation

    Since we already know lots about non-baryonic matter it's a little hard to see how the very notion challenges any laws of physics. Massive neutrinos, for example, are non-baryonic matter, and dark matter too. They exist. They don't account for the greater part of the dark matter that is inferred from observations, but they do exist.

    The question I have is why so many people are so antagonistic to the very notion of dark matter, routinely calling the people who suggest it as an obvious and minimal move to explain the rotation curves of spiral galaxies (one type of dark matter, possibly baryonic) to the dynamics of galactic clusters (another type of dark matter) to the large-scale motion of the universe (possibly another type of dark matter) "arrogant" and the like.

    We have an excellent theory of gravity that has withstood every experimental test in every situation, both strong-field and weak-field, short distances (Terrestrial corrections to GPS signals) and large distances (lensing). Furthermore, the hypothesis that there is dark matter is entirely consistent in precise numerical detail with general relativity and observations. That is, dark matter doesn't just explain things in a vague and hand-waving kind of way, it does so in a way that can be shown to be numerically consistent. That in itself is a test of GR too, and the way that MOND was eliminated from serious consideration: the dynamics of the Bullet Cluster are not consistent with MOND, but are consistent with GR plus dark matter.

    So anyone attacking the dark matter hypothesis has to argue that there is some exotic phenomenon that just happens to be precisely consistent with GR plus dark matter, but is something completely different from GR plus dark matter. That is a rather fine-tuned sort of explanation. It could happen, but I'm not hopeful.

    Dark matter as it stands is an extremely, possibly even overwhelmingly, likely hypothesis that is consistent in considerable numerical detail with GR and every empirical observation that has been made. You would have to be an idiot to call anyone who assumed it without further question "arrogant", unless you have an equally robust hypothesis to put up against it.

    The real question for the dark matter hypothesis is the one you've alluded to in your final paragraph: what kind of elementary particles--if any--is the dark matter at various scales made of? That is where one of the leading edges of particle physics is right now. It is a thankless and difficult task, and the people pursuing it deserve more than to be called arrogant by know-nothings.

    --
    Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  35. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And yet the very notion of "non-baryonic matter" challenges laws as fundamental and thoroughly-established as laws of gravitation. Pretending otherwise is dogmatic in the extreme.

    Yes, anyone who says neutrinos (which aren't baryons) have non-zero rest mass is dogmatic in the extreme. And anyone who says the high deuterium density in the universe is inconsistent with Big Bang nucleosynthesis without a substantial fraction of non-baryonic matter (as determined in the 1970s) is dogmatic in the extreme. Anyone who notices that Zwicky's 1933 Coma cluster observations and the 1959 observations of anomalously flat galactic rotation velocity curves are both solved by dark matter is dogmatic in the extreme. Anyone who notices that dark matter is favored over MOND by the 2006 Bullet Cluster observations is dogmatic in the Xtreme...

  36. pwned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They stole this picture from an episode of the original Star Trek.

    I remember it. I was there.

  37. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    And yet the very notion of "non-baryonic matter" challenges laws as fundamental and thoroughly-established as laws of gravitation.

    Uh no it doesn't. Why do you think that? Who told you that? Gravitational theory itself has nothing to say on the subject of baryonic vs non-baryonic matter, and another thoroughly-established theory, the Standard Model, has predicted non-baryonic matter which has also been subsequently verified to exist (google up neutrinos, W and Z gauge bosons).

    As the more detailed link on spacetelescope.com (EU hubble site) explains, this data actually confirms General Relativity in the relationship between lensing and red shift, plus confirms dark matter, plus confirms dark energy (accelerating universal expansion).

    Multiple hypothesis and theories all come together and make a bunch of detailed predictions, that prediction is borne out to a T by actual experimental observation, that's called a phenomenal success.

    Pretending otherwise is dogmatic in the extreme.

    No your assumption that this causes all kinds of problems that it does not is dogmatic. Despite what you or whoever informed you thinks, the dark matter hypothesis is not inherently flawed. It's quite a good hypothesis, actually.

    But further study is necessary, and the very true statement "we have no idea what it is" suggests to me that we don't even know if it really qualifies as matter. In that sense, calling it "dark matter" is misleading and potentially a case of multiplying entities. And having that pointed out should not embarrass or anger us.

    It being matter is simply the leading hypothesis. And while it is understood that it might be something that isn't actually "matter" at all, that would be the case of needlessly multiplying entities. We know that weakly interacting matter exists. Adding in a completely new thing that acts like matter but isn't would require a very good theory and some very solid experimental evidence to back it up. Hypothetically possible at this point, but way more out there than it being matter.

    In the meantime, the GP was not quite right, as we do have some good ideas what it could be, though of course we haven't confirmed it. The Neutralino is a leading candidate, and we may be closing in on confirmation of its existence.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  38. It's star trek by OFnow · · Score: 1

    The picture looks strikingly like the graphics of outer space entities shown
    on various episodes of the original star trek. But without the story line :-)

  39. The data was old, the analysis and imaging is new. by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 2, Informative

    The article dated "March 26, 2010":
    http://news.discovery.com/space/hubble-3d-map-universe-dark-matter.html
    has a source dated 25-Mar-2010::
    http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic1005.html
    with this quote which explains everything:

    A new study led by European scientists presents the most comprehensive analysis of data from the most ambitious survey ever undertaken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. These researchers have, for the first time ever, used Hubble data to probe the effects of the natural gravitational "weak lenses" in space and characterise the expansion of the Universe.

    The data was old, the analysis and imaging is new.

    The 'Links' at the bottom include the new paper, and the old study. The old press release dated "7-errNoSuchMonth-2007":
    "News Release heic0701 - First 3D map of the Universe's Dark Matter scaffolding"
    http://www.spacetelescope.org/news/html/heic0701.html

    Is the one described your original article:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6235751.stm

  40. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The question I have is why so many people are so antagonistic to the very notion of dark matter, routinely calling the people who suggest it... "arrogant" and the like.

    Personally I think the AC (perhaps unintentionally) nailed it -- it's part of a larger anti-science movement that considers the conclusions of science confusing, uncomfortable, or politically unattractive, and therefore seeks to discredit not just the particular theories but science in general. They do this by dressing up their ignorance with a thin veneer of scientific criticism in order to paint the professional scientists as the ones who are arrogant, ignorant, and arguing out of belief not evidence or reason.

    Dark matter gets singled out because it sounds weird (especially if you know nothing about it) and like scientists are just making things up (especially if...). And if they're just making that up, then maybe they're just making up global warming, or evolution, or the age of the earth.

    Even if they aren't against any of those particular theories, it's still just part of a general anti-science trend where people start with their conclusion -- the scientists are wrong because I don't understand them and I'm so smart that's not possible unless they're wrong -- and then work backwards to the kind of posts you see here. Accusing scientists of arrogance and dogmatism.

    I mean look at the GP. They says it's "dogmatic in the extreme" not to admit that non-baryonic matter violates the law of gravity, clearly demonstrating that they are arguing out of ignorance and a belief that dark matter theory can't be true. The hypocrisy is astounding.

    The world makes me sad. But data like this makes me happy. It's an exciting time in physics no matter what the doubters say and I can't wait to see where it leads.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  41. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  42. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  43. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The phenomenon is "non-explained gravity (from the observable universe)". There is some distance between this and the creation of some unseen substance unlike any we know, and even call it "dark matter". Especially considering that we dont know how really gravity works.

  44. more stupid speculation by ILuvRamen · · Score: 1

    from the article: "However, we cannot directly measure the stuff as it doesn't interact with electromagnetic radiation (i.e. it doesn't emit or reflect any light)"
    For like the billionth time, they don't know that! Why do they keep making that assumption?! It's 1000000000x more likely that it's just normal matter that doesn't happen to have measurable light (or other EM radiation) bouncing off of it at the moment. Just because we can't "see" it doesn't mean it's some magical, law of physics-breaking mystery material. That's like turning off all the lights in your room and then saying "well, logically all the matter in my room just disappeared into a different dimension or state of matter because that makes the most sense to me." Ugh, scientists can be such idiots sometimes. If you don't believe me, look up a history of idiotic assumptions about astronomy that were believed for absolutely no reason and then proven wrong.

    --
    Google's Super Secret Search Algorithm: SELECT @search_results FROM internet WHERE @search_results = 'good'
    1. Re:more stupid speculation by Tanuki64 · · Score: 1

      And you are? I am certain you are willing to reveal your real name to us so we can read your papers on that topic.

    2. Re:more stupid speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally and emotionally I feel that dark matter is a pretty bogus theory, but some very smart people have put forward some very strong arguments for dark matter being non-baryon. I'm not knowledgeable enough to poke holes in those arguments and crazier theories have held up, so I'm willing to wait and see. Your argument is not even a valid scientific one, so my bet is on the astrophysicists. If you want to have an open mind about that, instead of using gut instinct, I suggest you start here.

    3. Re:more stupid speculation by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Dark matter being simply regular matter that is hard to see was in fact one of the first hypothesis put forward and of course hugely favored for its simplicity, and to this day it is believed to account for some dark matter.

      However further observation has largely ruled out this possibility for the majority of dark matter. The large halos of dark matter surrounding galaxies should be absolutely flooded by the light from said galaxy. It's not like the lights in your room are off, it's like you've got a 10-billion watt bulb blazing away and still can't see anything. The fact that this matter neither reflects nor obscures EM radiation in any part of the spectrum makes it completely unlike any "normal" matter we've ever (not) seen or even theorized.

      On the other hand, particles that have mass but don't interact electromagnetically don't violate any laws of physics at all. We have already experimentally confirmed the existence of several such particles. In fact in the time it took you to write your post, thousands of these particles originating from the sun have passed through your body, probably without interacting with a single atom.

      The thing is, even if you could suggest a type of baryonic matter that was completely transparent with a refractive index of exactly 1 for all frequencies, it still wouldn't match the observed behavior of dark matter. Even such a type of matter would still be subject to the electrostatic forces that keep atoms of ordinary matter spaced well apart. When two galaxies collide, this ordinary matter should be slowed by interaction with the interstellar dust clouds that make up much of a galaxy's mass. We observe this with all the visible matter in galaxies, but the dark matter just keeps right on chugging through slowed by neither the dark matter of the other galaxy nor by the clouds of dust and gas.

      So, it's not an assumption. It's a hypothesis based on quite a large amount of evidence. There were competing hypothesis that tried to explain the behavior of galaxies without resorting to non-baryonic dark matter, but even they have had to admit that they can't match these observations without it.

      Which do you really think is more likely? That it's all "normal" matter that just happens to act exactly like non-baryonic weakly interacting (meaning... interacts via the weak force) particles contrary to all theory? Or that it's a weakly interacting particle?

      Either way, if it's going to be proven wrong, it's going to be proven wrong by experiment conducted by the same scientists making this "assumption".

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
  45. Re:The Religion of Science by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    Isn't doubt what got us science in the first place?

    Only when done sincerely, and with an understanding of the existing theories and the evidence for them, and thus their actual flaws.

    We call those people "scientists". There are plenty of them who are exercising legitimate doubt yet following the evidence.

    A "doubter" shares none of these aspects with scientists except for the doubt, and even then calling "doubt" is inaccurate because they are so often already convinced that the science is obviously wrong, and the scientists arrogant dogmatists for not admitting it.

    At no point in my post did I suggest that dark matter is wrong.

    Uh, you said that the leading dark matter hypothesis contradicted gravitational theory, which would mean one or the other was wrong, and you correctly noted that gravitational theory has been verified extensively, strongly suggesting you thought non-baryonic dark matter was ruled out.

    You said claiming otherwise was "dogmatic in the extreme".

    What I suggested was that people who insist it is right have a very poor grasp of the scientific method. At present it appears to be a very strong hypothesis. That's great.

    Nobody is insisting that it is irrefutable. "Very strong hypothesis" is a much better description -- much stronger than most people, including you, are suggesting. The observation of the phenomenon we call dark matter is, at this point, essentially a fact, and that may be what the people are talking about.

    I like to maintain a healthy degree of skepticism about any observational science that, for reasons of scale or scope, cannot (or has yet to) be proven in a laboratory setting.

    That's great. Nothing wrong with that. But it would be helpful if you treated skeptics with skepticism, and looked into their arguments a little closer, or looked more into what evidence does exist for astronomical theory. You might be surprised to find out it's a lot more than you think, or were told by a "skeptic"!

    Doubt is a good way to attack religion. Characterizing doubt as an attack on science is to turn science into a religion, and defeat its very purpose.

    I'm not characterizing doubt itself as an attack on science.

    I'm characterizing "doubt" that is founded in ignorance and the a-priori decision that the science must be wrong, as an attack on science. Which it is. Calling scientists arrogant and dogmatic because you don't understand the theory and because you can't believe they are right is not legitimate doubt. It's not useful scientific skepticism. It's hypocrisy.

    While you certainly aren't as bad as many, since information you were unaware of appears to affect your opinion, this is still basically what you were doing -- calling every scientist working on non-baryonic dark matter a dogmatist for not admitting your (incorrect) argument proved them wrong. It's funny how you say doubt is a good way to attack religion, while simultaneously doing everything you can (including the topic of this post) to imply science is a religion and thus attack it via doubt.

    Step one to being a useful scientific critic: Stop using arrogance and dogmatism to claim all scientists working in a particular field are arrogant and dogmatic.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  46. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    My mistake. It was my understanding that non-baryonic matter was still strictly theoretical and basically precluded its interaction with other matter except in gravitational terms. It may have been explained incorrectly to me, or I may have misunderstood. Thanks for clearing that up.

    For future reference, when someone says that Hypothesis A is clearly contradicted by Theory B, when Theory B is something that anyone working on Hypothesis A would obviously be familiar with, and indeed requires to formulate their hypothesis, it's a pretty safe bet that the person telling you this is wrong, mistaken, or simply full of shit.

    It's as bad as saying climatologists ignore the sun and its impact on climate cycles when in reality solar radiance is a key component of climate theories.

    As tired as OP may be of defending the theory from ignorant people, one does not cure ignorance with anger and condescension.

    Ignorance that does not want to be cured cannot be cured at all.

    Since they'd already posted the explanation in at least one other thread, and this was the Nth "dark matter obviously doesn't exist cus I'm so smart" post -- EXACTLY the kind of person I was talking about being a giant hypocrite -- I think it's understandable. If that person wanted to acquire a clue, they had ample opportunity to do so.

    Or are you saying that we should put up with infinite amounts of deliberately ignorant people arrogantly declaring themselves right and everyone who has actually studied the field wrong? With hypocrites calling scientists religious zealots when it is they who are arguing from belief and an unwillingness to admit they might be wrong?

    Sorry that's just not in human nature, nor do I think it is helpful to lay down and be a doormat for these fools.

    Thanks especially for the information on Neutralinos. I've read a fair bit about dark matter (for someone who is not even remotely a physicist, anyway) and I'd never heard of them.

    You're welcome. That's a refreshing change of pace so I'll just say here's a decent place to start to learn more.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  47. Re:Dark matter doesn't exist. by MightyDrunken · · Score: 1

    Dark matter sounds really dull, hypothetical particles which only interact with gravity. This would mean about 23% of the Universe's mass is just boring stuff, while only 5% is interesting matter like us. But what if dark matter does have other interactions? If there were other forces of nature beyond the 4 we know of then dark matter maybe as interesting at normal matter. If these other forces did not interact with our form of matter we would not have found them yet. Maybe to dark matter, we are the dark matter. It would be cool if there was another "shadow universe" which we can hardly notice yet was just as rich as our own. Fun but probably not true.