• Iced Raktajino@startrek.website
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    1 day ago

    The thing with dark matter is it’s just a placeholder term for “we don’t know what the hell it is”, and aren’t most hypotheses pulled out of the ass before experimentation to prove them?

    Plus, Dr. Kaku is a string theorist so wacky is pretty much par for the course in that field. Granted, I consider him more of a TV personality these days and grew up watching him as a speaker on [insert any number of Discovery Channel shows here].

    Maybe I’m just biased and enjoy the wacky theories because I’m more interested in seeing them proven right or wrong and thinking about the implications if they happen to prove correct.

    • Zink@programming.dev
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      15 hours ago

      Yeah, I like to think of it this way:

      Dark matter is not a theory or even a hypothesis. It is a collection of observations.

      Having “matter” in the name is kind of a presumptive thing, like “our observations act like there’s too much gravity, and matter creates gravity, and we can’t see any extra shit, so…”

      • AppleTea@lemmy.zip
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        9 hours ago

        As I understand it, the “matter” part is a hold over from physicists trying to fix their faulty calculations.

        Looking for “matter” that only interacts with gravity is a bit like looking for the perfectly smooth frictionless plane. I mean, somethings gotta account for the sums being off, but the real world explanation is anybody’s guess.

    • megopie@beehaw.org
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      13 hours ago

      For a theory to be useful, there needs to be a way that it can be proven wrong. If there is no way the theory can be proven wrong, then it’s not a theory. Something that can’t potentially be proven false also can’t potentially be proven to be true.

      The problem with this kind of off the cuff “but what if” stuff is that not enough thought has gone in to it to even know what could be tested.

    • neidu3@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I’m not smart enough to prove my hypothesis, nor am I smart enough to understand any proof that I am wrong, but I’m not entirely 100% convinced that dark matter exists as an attractive phenomenon inside galaxies the way it is often described.

      The way I see it, it might as well be a repulsive force between galaxies. This way it could also help explain Dark Energy.

      • Zagorath@quokk.au
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        6 hours ago

        The primary thing we have detected is an attractive force within galaxies. Whether that’s otherwise-undetectable particles or a mistake in how we calculate gravity or something else, we definitely know it’s that there is more attractive force holding galaxies together than there should be based on detectable matter and general relativity.

        Simply put: galaxies rotate too fast. Much, much too fast. That can’t be caused by repulsion between galaxies. Only by the stars within a galaxy being pulled towards the centre of that galaxy my than we would expect. Similar to how you have to spin faster to hold a big bucket of water horizontal without spilling than to hold a small bucket of water.

      • i_love_FFT@jlai.lu
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        1 day ago

        While there may be a part of it being “different gravity”, dark matter cannot 100% be explained by modified gravity of any kind.

        Why do we know this? Well there are observable galaxies that survived collisions and have been stripped of their dark matter, and the reverse is also true (galaxy-sized dark matter blobs without baryonic matter in it).

        I can refer you to this wonderful PBS Spacetime video about it: https://youtu.be/5t0jaE--l0Y

        • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          We have never detected dark matter. Dunno what you’re talking about. It’s existence was posited because of differences in observed velocities at the edge of galaxies vs what we expected to see.

          • i_love_FFT@jlai.lu
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            23 hours ago

            What is your definition of “detected”? If only direct interaction using the EM field is required, then we have never detected anything…

            There are lots of gravitational lensing images of dark matter, we can even see some structures in its shape and distribution.

            Check this out: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet_Cluster

              • i_love_FFT@jlai.lu
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                3 hours ago

                How do you explain the mounting evidences of double images and observing the same event twice (or more) with exactly the expected delay by grav lensing?

                Anyhow, no new physics ever went against the old math, it always just adds corrective terms. Any new mathematics will need to be able to make the same predictions as GR in the limited cases of whatever this new limit will be (small distance or something?)

                The old saying that “Einstein proved Newton was wrong” is a gross misunderstanding. A nevessary base principle for GR to be accepter was that it reduces to Newtonian mechanics at low speeds.

            • someacnt@sh.itjust.works
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              17 hours ago

              I really don’t get the prevalence of the attitude “If we don’t see it with light, it does not exist”. Is it that improbable that there is some matter which does not interact with light? imo, similar argument could be made to deny existence of atoms - we cannot see it directly.

              • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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                14 hours ago

                A big argument for “not all matter must necessarily interact electromagnetically” is that we know of particles which don’t interact with the strong force - why should that fundamental force be special?

            • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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              16 hours ago

              Read your source. There’s lots of criticism in the source itself. If gravitational lensing was proof of dark matter, many someone’s would already have a Nobel prize for it. They don’t.

              • Soulg@ani.social
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                22 hours ago

                What are you talking about? We know for a fact dark matter exists. We just have absolutely no idea what it is.

                • skibidi@lemmy.world
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                  19 hours ago

                  What we know is that general relativity fails to explain gravitational interactions at very large scales for the matter we can see in telescopes.

                  The simplest answer for this conundrum is that there is extra matter that we can’t see in telescopes - aka it is ‘dark’ matter. This substance doesn’t appear to interact at all outside of gravity - which is a property we haven’t observed anywhere else. Further, in order to explain the motions we see, it would have to outweigh all the visible matter in the universe by a factor of 5, which seems to strain credibility given that - again - we have never seen anything like it.

                  Another answer for the observations is we are wrong about gravity, that it behaves differently at very large scales. This doesn’t require a massive amount of invisible magic substance conveniently spread throughout the universe, but to date no theory has been able to explain all the strange observations - and Dark Matter remains the moderate consensus view.

                  This doesn’t mean dark matter absolutely exists, it is just a hole in our current understanding. We’ve been looking for it for nearly a century and have yet to find direct evidence. In fact, there isn’t even one theory of Dark Matter because it also has difficulty explaining every available observation.

                  In summary: we have mountains and mountains of evidence that our current theory of gravity fail to explain the big stuff, we have exceedingly little evidence as to what the disconnect with reality is.

                • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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                  22 hours ago

                  Right, we don’t know what it is, where it is, how it interacts. We only know that our observations don’t match, so it must be there 🙄

          • Björn@swg-empire.de
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            1 day ago

            Dark matter can be detected through gravitational lensing. Rotation curves was just the first way we detected it.

      • LastYearsIrritant@sopuli.xyz
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        1 day ago

        We know that’s not the case because we can see different galaxies with different levels of dark matter.

        Dark matter doesn’t interact with anything else except by gravity, we don’t know why, but we can detect that behavior by seeing the way it clumps together.

        We can also see that galaxies that collide with each other have different levels of dark matter than galaxies that haven’t recently done so. The dark matter appears to just pass through each other and continue on while the regular matter hits each other and stays generally together in one group.

        It’s pretty interesting when you work through the details of what we do and don’t know.

      • Iced Raktajino@startrek.website
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        1 day ago

        I’m not entirely 100% dark matter exists in galaxies the way often described. … The way I see it, it might as well be a repulsive force between galaxies opposed to the current understanding of it being am attractive force. Plus, if it were a phenomenon that pushed things apart, it could also explain Dark Energy.

        And to me, that’s a perfectly valid theory. Like other proposed explanations for dark matter or dark energy or “whatever the hell it is we can detect the effect of but can’t identify”, it’s difficult to test.

        That’s why I enjoy science. It’s like a big puzzle, and sometimes you get halfway done and realize you put it together wrong and have to start over.

        • neidu3@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          I would like to emphasize the first part of my previous comment. As I am a hillbilly occasionally cosplaying as a smart and educated person, I am incapable of exploring my statement further than just making the claim. And for that I must insist on referring to it as an hypothesis, unless someone shows me some math that it could actually work. And I hope anyone showing me said math brings the necessary crayons and puppets to explain it in a manner that I can understand.

          • Iced Raktajino@startrek.website
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            1 day ago

            I am a hillbilly occasionally cosplaying as a smart and educated person

            Same. Which explains why I (twice, lol) incorrectly used the terms “theory” and “hypothesis” interchangeably when those are totally different things in sciences.

          • ReptilianCleric@lemmy.zip
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            1 day ago

            Unfortunately of course such hypotheses are extraordinarily difficult to actually test. However intuitively I do kind of like where you’re coming from. I’ve always been fascinated by how everything that we conceptually are aware of has a sorta polar opposite that we kind of define it by.

      • four@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        Wouldn’t that mean that that force would be stronger on the edges of the galaxies, instead of the center? I imagine this is something we could figure out

      • wholookshere@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        Plausible!

        I had a bachelor’s in physics a decade ago.

        But here’s how my memory describes how we discovered, or at least how we did it in my computational physics class.

        You have stars of known size, and there for light output as its directly proportional to size. You also have a known distance.

        You can then calculate how bright the star should be. But its wrong.

        Meaning there’s things in the way thats blocking light.

        So we call it dark matter because it hasn’t been directly observed and its clearly there. It could be our fundamentals are wrong, but that’s unlikely.

        It could very well follow gravitational fields, and then attracted to galaxies with large masses.

        But it could also be something in the vacuum. We just have no evidence to suggest either way.

      • ReptilianCleric@lemmy.zip
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        1 day ago

        I guess on a similar note, my own wacky theory is that our dimension can be affected at any given time by up to 13 other dimensions, but which 13 can change amongst a potentially infinite number. I imagine certain dimensions would more likely be co-terminus (I term I believe I’m borrowing from a Dungeons and Dragons type source) with ours than others but who knows.

        • DomeGuy@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          One of the biggest harms sci fi and fantays did to public scientific literacy is the abuse of the word “dimension”

          D&D’s astral and ethereral planes are not seperate dimenions so much as they are four-dimensional planes seperated from the really mortals live along a axis of reality.

          The “11 dimensional reality” idea is an attempt to explain the asymmetry of the four fundamental forces by postulating that there are additional axis straught line axis that those forces propagate through.

          • ReptilianCleric@lemmy.zip
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            1 day ago

            Oh, I hear ya. And although obviously inspired by RPGs, I do conceptualize my wacky theory more in the context of string theory and related ideas.

    • Bluescluestoothpaste@sh.itjust.works
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      23 hours ago

      It’s not even “we dont know what the hell it is” because we don’t even know that there’s an it.

      It’s more like “our numbers dont add up but wouldn’t it be cool if there was something invisible that explained it?”