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Dark matter would not be expected to interact with "normal" matter. (I really dislike using the word "normal" here. Since there is so much more DM in the universe, why couldn't it be the more "normal" state, while the matter we are made of is the outlier)DM does not interact with electromagnetic radiation. This means that it does not interact electromagnetically at all. A collision between two hunks of "normal" matter really just involves the interaction of electromagnetic fields. Remove those fields and they would just pass through each other like ghosts. Now since DM doesn't have this type of interaction, even with itself, it will not form that type of clumped up structures other matter does. The same electromagnetic interaction is what causes "normal" matter to stick together. This means DM forms low density clouds. For example, the DM halo in which a typical galaxy is embedded, extends far beyond the limits of the galaxy proper. Thus while there may be way more DM in that halo then there is other matter in the galaxy, the DM is spread out over a much, much, larger volume. The galaxy itself is made up of structures that have a greater density than its average. Star systems are denser than the galaxy on a whole, and planets, Sun, etc are denser than the star systems in which they reside. So, when push comes to shove, if you work out the density of DM in terms of overall mass divided into volume, it works out that the amount of DM spread out within the volume of the solar system is only about the same as a small asteroid. So even if it did collide with the other matter in the solar system, it would not be a significant enough addition to notice.
And yet another candidate for dark matter bites the dust. This time tiny black holes https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2019/04/190402113042.htm Perhaps Dark matter is just an effect of how gravity works, and not a detectable substance, as suggested by MOND
Too many observations rule out a "MOND only" explanation
However, if one galaxy behaves differently than the other in terms of gravity, then it must be due to that one galaxy containing something that we cannot see that makes it behave differently. This argues for the DM hypothesis, as unlike MOND theories which have to apply to all galaxies, there is nothing that says a galaxy has to have a certain given amount of DM.
Might it not also indicate that gravity does not work the way current theories indicate. The Dark matter effect is not conclusive evidence for dark matter.
Quote from: flummoxed on 17/04/2019 19:05:40Might it not also indicate that gravity does not work the way current theories indicate. The Dark matter effect is not conclusive evidence for dark matter. No. Even If the laws are gravity are different than what we assume they are, they still have to be consistent. You can't have two galaxies both made of the same amount of baryonic matter arranged in the same way behaving differently from each other in terms of gravity no matter how you change the rules of gravity, because the rules have to apply equally to both galaxies. You can't have one galaxy behaving by one set of gravitational laws and another behaving according to an entirely different set of laws. A successful model has to be able to explain all the observations and not just a selected sub-set.