If some dark matter is normal matter that we can't see, like planets, brown dwarfs etc, then is a black hole classed as dark matter also?
What about all the dark matter that went into the hole? Or is our hypothetical dark matter immune to gravity?
I've recently read somwhere that at most 4% of our Universe consists of regular matter as we know it. Some 26% consists of Dark Matter and some 70% consists of Dark Energy.
A) How are these numbers arrived at? How is the "Dark Energy" converted to matter?
B) What ever happened to the question of where all the anti-matter went?
If our dark matter interacts with gravity, then there might be many more times dark matter falling into black holes than regular matter. Interesting concept.

That is unlikely since there are no nearby universes. They are talking about dimensions in this universe.I was reading somewhere that according to M-theory the reason why gravity is infinitesimally weaker than the other 3 known forces [EM, weak, and strong] is that it isn't confined to the 4 dimensional "brane" that we exist in and the other three forces are confined to. The idea is that since it diffuses thru higher dimensional space we don't experience it as strongly. If this is the case then it could be that all that extra mass maybe the gravitational effect of matter in "nearby" universes![]()
That is unlikely since there are no nearby universes. They are talking about dimensions in this universe.
It is more accuate that M-theory has a "landscape" of possible solutions each of which is a possible universes.Both M-theory [especially M-theory] and some interpretations of QM predict multiple "universes". The former describes our cosmos as being a 4 dimensional "brane" suspended within a "higher" multidimensional construct called the bulk and that there maybe many other branes with their own cosmologies. The latter states that the universe continuously produces infinitely branching timelines. Where or not this is actually the case remains to be seen but the fact is that multiple universes is one of the many assertions of the theory.
It is more accuate that M-theory has a "landscape" of possible solutions each of which is a possible universes.
Neither the M-theory or QM universes have any interaction with each other.
The M-theory branes are restricted to 1 cosmos. I interpret cosmos as the same as universe. I an not sure your implication "that branes can interact with each other via the force of gravity" is correct. My impression is that branes just move about in 11D space.I understand your point but its not entirely correct [atleast from what I've learned of the two theories]. What I'm saying is that M-theory states that gravitons are not bound to the brane that makes up the observable cosmos. This strongly implies that branes can interact with each other via the force of gravity. According to the "many worlds" interpretation of QM certain interference phenomenon could be considered an interaction of equivalent particles from different universes. The "pilot wave" of a particle's wave function is considered to be the summation of the observed particle's multiverse counterparts.
The M-theory branes are restricted to 1 cosmos. I interpret cosmos as the same as universe. I an not sure your implication "that branes can interact with each other via the force of gravity" is correct. My impression is that branes just move about in 11D space.
QM itself has no connection with gravity. Thus the sum over world histories does not include gravity.
If our dark matter interacts with gravity, then there might be many more times dark matter falling into black holes than regular matter. Interesting concept.
Not necessarily. In order to suck up matter, it either needs to be on a direct collision course with a black hole (which will happen, but not very much considering how bloody big space is), or it needs to lose energy in order to fall in. That's easy for ordinary matter to do (ordinary matter can collide with itself inelastically and give off energy in the form of radiation), but not so easy for dark matter to do. So no, black holes don't need to absorb more dark matter than ordinary matter.
Guys. Lighten up a bit.