You read the article and realize that no, it is evidence for precisely fuck all.
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Not a physicist.
I seem to recall that there was an article sometime back that claimed that the 'dark matter' theory had been disproven, or was being strongly reconsidered.
Can someone point me to a good layperson explanation?
Thank you.
Daniel and Kelly' Extraordinary Universe podcast discussed it in an entertaining and enlightening episode I enjoyed amidst a snow storm last year: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/how-can-we-see-dark-matter/id1436616330?i=1000440743429
It made me wonder if ancient gravitational waves reverberating throughout the cosmos could be the culprit, but it appears not based on current evidence.
Thanks
i wish jcap would stop oversimplifying their reports. in greek, please.
Wasn't dark matter just a placeholder for unaccounted for mass? Now it's supposed to be an actual distinct thing?
No, that's dark energy. Dark matter is based on direct observation.
Yeah the whole reason we can't account for it according to the wimp theory is that it doesn't really interact with the EM force much so it would be impossible to see and kind of pass right through you even if you ran into it. When everything you use to see the universe both big and small is mediated by EM, completely missing something isn't that surprising. More ghost matter than dark, really.
theres 2 groups... people trying to prove dark matter is matter of some kind... and those where 'dark matter' is a placeholder for 'anomalous mass'
as just a layman observer, im in the second camp. no need for some new crazy thing when it could very well be tied to something else we dont fully understand but know exist, black holes.
So... just like on Earth, the majority of the universe is full of wimps! And Black Holes are the universe's version of, "suck it up, buttercup!"