If true, why does the sun have a non-circular heliopause and a comet tail like heliosheath? Why does it have a bow shock? It has to be traveling a differentt velocity than the ISM and should be typical of most stars. You don't want the sun to be special, do you?![]()
Because the Sun is moving at 26 km/s relative to the local ISM. (Compare that to 220 km/s net orbital velocity.) What direction do you think the ISM is moving in? Do you think the Sun is blasting through it towards Vela (which would be the case if the Sun were orbiting gravitationally while the ISM were pinned to a Peratt-style fast disk?) or towards Cygnus (which would be the case if the ISM were pinned down, and the Sun moving faster)? Any guesses? No? Sorry, buddy, the local ISM is blowing in from Auriga---from the galactic anticenter and a bit north, i.e. as inconsistent as possible with your off-the-cuff "I bet I found a discrepancy OMG". Of course, you just thought this objection up 10 seconds ago, so I have no doubt that you can forget about it at least as quickly.
This simply means that the Sun and the Local Cloud aren't on perfectly circular orbits, but rather on slightly elliptical ones. That's how orbital mechanics works.
And why do stars in our vicinity move relative to one another if we're all along for the great galactic dark matter ride? You don't want are little region of the galaxy to be atypical, do you?
That's not how orbital mechanics works. Dark matter+baryons set up a central-force-law attractive potential. Every star/DEG/cloud follows an independent orbit in that potential. There are many possible orbits; we're on one of them. If you've been thinking of it as a fixed fluid that "sweeps things along", you've been wrong.
Ah, yes, the repository of all accurate physics analysis, physicsmyths.org.uk. You realized you just quoted a site which simply repeats the exact same arguments you've been making throughout this thread? If PC is wrong, it's wrong no matter who says it.