sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
Were I personally to speculate on the origin of "non baryonic" matter that might be present in a galaxy inside of our electric universe, it would be non baryons in the form of electrons streams in vast quantities.
That kind of incredibly stupid idea just proves yet again that you don't understand the most basic aspects of physics. Free electrons are about the least invisible thing in existence. They interact extremely strongly with all frequencies of electromagnetic radiation. In the quantities necessary to account for dark matter, they would also give the universe a *huge* net electric charge, which is impossible for all sorts of obvious reasons.
That would explain those "slinky" (Birkeland current) structures we observe in space by the way.
Those structures form in all simulations of cosmology, including those that do not take electromagnetic forces into account. Gravity alone, acting on otherwise non-interacting particles, makes filamentary* structures precisely like the ones we see.
What makes you believe that new and exotic forms of non baryonic material are required to explain these "non observations" of matter in distant galaxies?
Physics.
*One should note that much of the apparent filamentary structure observed in both simulations and the real universe is an artifact of the way the images are processed. If you make a slightly different choice of brightness map, you get something that looks much more clumpy and much less filamentary. But either way, pure gravity simulations match data very well.
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