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I think it's just that galaxies behave as if there is more matter in and around them than can be seen. There have been suggestions that it could be that gravity changes at cosmological scales (Modified Newtonian Dynamics or 'MOND'), but that has some theoretical difficulties, serious implications for current theories, and doesn't explain all observed anomalies, so the idea is, that the more obvious solution, i.e. that it is matter that we don't see, should be eliminated before more exotic hypotheses are seriously considered. Nevertheless, there is a good deal of work being done in parallel on other ideas, including MOND, to explain it.
Quote from: dlorde on 09/07/2016 13:29:40I think it's just that galaxies behave as if there is more matter in and around them than can be seen. There have been suggestions that it could be that gravity changes at cosmological scales (Modified Newtonian Dynamics or 'MOND'), but that has some theoretical difficulties, serious implications for current theories, and doesn't explain all observed anomalies, so the idea is, that the more obvious solution, i.e. that it is matter that we don't see, should be eliminated before more exotic hypotheses are seriously considered. Nevertheless, there is a good deal of work being done in parallel on other ideas, including MOND, to explain it.Can you go into a bit more detail for me as to what those theoretical difficulties and serious implications are and also what abnormalities it doesn't explain? That might help me understand more. I haven't heard those aspects.
But my question is having that said, understanding the calculations and why the extra gravity is apparent, why must it be a new form of undetectable matter that has no interaction electromagnetically to be the culprit?
Why isn't it called dark gravity instead, merely gravity that we know is present but we don't understand why?
Why must some mystery, as of yet undetected, made of different stuff than we can fathom particle be the solution?
I guess that part just confuses me. Why the focus on this unimaginable particle instead of a focus on what other things might cause gravity itself to increase without the need for a mass to be present?
For example, we know that spacetime can curve, and that this curvature is directly related to gravity. Is it not possible that other things we haven't yet thought of can also create this curvature?
Thanks. I guess that makes sense to me. I guess it just for some reason doesn't sit right with me that there's some mega abundant form of matter that isn't bound by EM at all, can't be seen, detected or found to interact in any way except for gravity. Just feels like we're missing something don't it?
Whether something 'sits right' with you isn't necessarily a reliable guide to reality; quantum mechanics is a prime example. But theory allows for a variety of particles that match the required characteristics, e.g. WIMPS (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles). After all, there are known particles that are 'mega abundant' and hardly interact at all - neutrinos; but they have very low mass.
Sorry Pete, but I didn't really find that to be helpful much at all, and it actually came off a bit condescending.
What you seemed to fail to realize is that I wasn't asking because I was trying to imply they don't know what they're talking about, I asked the questions cause I merely didn't understand.
But you replied as if it was wrong to ask the questions, as if everybody is just supposed to 'know' the right answers.
You gave a lot of 'cause that's the way it is" and "don't ask questions cosmologists know what they're doing" fluff, but no actual educational detail, or at least very little.