Most Detailed View of Dark Matter Mapped By Hubble
astroengine writes "Building on previous studies by the Hubble Space Telescope, new analysis of gravitational lensing data has revealed the most detailed map of the distribution of dark matter yet. The distribution appears as a beautiful ghost-like or ethereal haze and could have serious ramifications on our understanding as to how galaxy clusters form and evolve."
HUBBLE GOTCHU!!!
http://www.latenightwithjimmyfallon.com/video/hubble-gotchu-42610/1222742/
I'm just asking the question, because I don't have a great deal of knowledge about this, but could an alternative explanation be that our theory of gravity is wrong?
Luckily this story is a dupe and we know from the previous one that there's a unicorn in there.
Those colors come from the unicorn farting.
Who would have though Einstein could be so wrong in two of his famous quotes:
"All things should be only as complicated as they need to be.”
"The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensible."
All these hacks like dark energy, dark matter, string theory, hundreds of field/particles/magic numbers in the standard model to try to describe and model known cosmology and subatomic particles.
Seems like we have reached the limit of our intelligence to further understand the universe. The current state of affairs in physics is a mess and nothing of significance has occurred in the field for the last 20 years!
Paste an image of Bender into that dark matter image, and it would look like the episode of Futurama, where Bender meets the God Entity.
"You were doing well until everyone died."
So who copied who?
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
Building this map may result in the shortening of the life span of the universe.
I just learned that Allan Sandage died this weekend. He was a giant among astronomers and did a lot of work with the Hubble. Take some time and learn about him if you care about astronomy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Sandage
I consider the possibility of an incomplete model of gravity as sort of like newtonian physics. We do all sorts of local observations and the models work fine, but then under 'fantastic' scenarios beyond our ability to observe or reproduce things don't work out right, i.e. extremely fast speeds. Then Einstein provides us with relativity and it provides a factor that makes it all work and even fits cleanly into Newtonian models as a term that is immeasurably small to explain how things appear to act different without having to apply totally different rules at some arbitrary point.
Dark matter may be something real, but right now it only manifests as something to get the math to work out using our current understanding. At the huge scale or even along a dimensional relationship we can't understand, some factor emerges that knocks off our predictions but is ever present with immeasurably small impact in the 'well-understood' cases. I personally consider either case equally likely, there is either a thing (dark matter) or a mechanism out there that just exists as a big question mark until either collaborating data on where and what the dark matter is appears, or a more precise model comes out to explain the discrepencies away.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
Gravity calculations wrong? Dark matter! What? That's makes other calculations wrong? Dark matter! The more the better!
I'm being sarcastic here, but actually it's because I'm just so jealous. Real scientists can't simply explain things away by using Substance X.
Anything that we can not or have not been able to explain used to be called an act of God. Now, it's an act of dark matter. Hubble proves it!
It can be go tiem now plees?
It looks like a giant cosmic brain! I think they are onto someone.
Long answer: Dark matter wasn't invented just because someone saw some anomalous behavior that didn't agree with theory, and said to themselves: "Oh, there has to be something mysterious at work here, we'll call it dark matter.". There are several reasons for believing in dark matter, for example that when measuring gravity we notice gravity coming from directions where we can't see any matter. However, the source of this gravity behaves a lot like matter would. For example we can observe these "invisible gravity sources" being thrown around when two galaxies collide. Because these "invisible gravity sources" acts a lot like matter, except for the fact that we can't see it, it's called dark matter.
If you're not yet convinced, take a look at this recent blogpost by a professional astrophysicist: http://scienceblogs.com/startswithabang/2010/11/the_simplest_argument_for_dark.php In this post, he basically explains how we can derive the existence of dark matter from: A) Assuming that the theory of general relativity is valid, B) assuming that the big bang theory is valid, and C) our observations of the cosmic microwave background.
It seems that "dark matter" is by far the most common type of matter in the universe; what we call "normal matter" is very much in the minority.
You realize what this means?
WE are the "Goatee Universe".
CmdrTaco... your agonizer, please.
Everybody gets what the majority deserves.
Anyone remember 70 column text on an Apple ][ graphics screen? It worked best on a monochrome monitor. I forget the name of the program, but I think it was by the Beagle Bros.
no
It's provable correct.
No model in physics is "provably correct". That's not how the scientific process works. Scientific hypothesis and their resulting models can never be proven conclusively correct, they can only dis-proven. You can support a model with vast amounts of evidence and be quite confident that it is a useful and accurate model but it only takes a single piece of evidence to establish that the model is wrong. When we say something is a physical law we are basically saying we have a mathematical model for how this works and we've studied the hell out of it and every piece of evidence we've gathered so far supports the correctness of the model. That is NOT the same thing as saying we have proven this model to be correct - it is saying we have been unable to prove this model is wrong.
Of course we can also still use models that we know are less accurate (provably INcorrect) if they provide good approximations under known circumstances. We know relativity is a more accurate model of the physical world than Newtonian models for a great many problems. But the differences are negligible under many conditions and the relativistic models are much more mathematically cumbersome.
Here's most detailed picture of dark matter I've found.
OK, I know it's just my pattern-seeking brain working overtime... ... but does anyone else see Cthulhu in that picture at the link?!?
Just in case... Yog-Soggoth! Hast'r! Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn!
Love the picture of Einstein at the bottom.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
There's strange stuff happening much closer to home, too. Any bets these cases have something to do with each other?
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Pioneer_anomaly
This reminds me of something that has puzzled me for a while:
* The energy of a photon is proportional to its frequency.
* Photons are redshifted due to the expansion of space.
So the energy of the photons, e.g. from CMB, is lower. Where did the energy go? It must be connected to expansion somehow, but how? And on a second note, Einsteins famous equation tells us that energy is proportional to mass, so does this influence mass somehow?
This is probably obvious for you physicists out there, so I thought I'd ask.
My UID is prime. Hah!
Isn't it wonderful how science uncovers the nature of god's universe for all to marvel at?
This really illustrates intelligent design's truly blasphemous form.
My ism, it's full of beliefs.