I know that (just so we're clear).Neutrino oscillations have been confirmed in lab experiments.
I know that (just so we're clear).Neutrino oscillations have been confirmed in lab experiments.
Neutrino oscillations have been confirmed in lab experiments.
You keep missing the point, and denying history.That's exactly why your analogy (and DRD's analogy fail).
Unlike the hypothetical "dark matter" particle you're claiming is responsible for gamma rays in space, neutrinos have a known source. They show up in labs. We can create "transmitters' and "detectors" and real equipment to measure them. We can see how they interact with matter.
Where does your mythical dark matter particle thingy come come? Where can I get some of this stuff to play with in lab? How do I detect here here in a lab? Unlike gravity and neutrinos that show up here on Earth, why doesn't this stuff do anything to anything here on Earth? Why doesn't it emit gamma rays here too? How do I build a "transmitter" of "dark matter"? How do I verify this new particle has the various properties you claim? For instance, how do I know it experiences "longevity" and doesn't decay into something else we already observe in less than a millisecond? How can I verify it emits gamma rays in an empirical test?
That's exactly why your analogy (and DRD's analogy fail).
Unlike the hypothetical "dark matter" particle you're claiming is responsible for gamma rays in space, neutrinos have a known source.
Where does your mythical dark matter particle thingy come come? Where can I get some of this stuff to play with in lab? How do I detect here here in a lab? Unlike gravity and neutrinos that show up here on Earth, why doesn't this stuff do anything to anything here on Earth? Why doesn't it emit gamma rays here too? How do I build a "transmitter" of "dark matter"? How do I verify this new particle has the various properties you claim?
For instance, how do I know it experiences "longevity" and doesn't decay into something else we already observe in less than a millisecond?
How can I verify it emits gamma rays in an empirical test?
You are really out of date with your scientific knowlege. You seem to be stuck in your school boy days (some sort of second childhood?)Where can I get some of this stuff to play with in lab? How do I detect here here in a lab? Unlike gravity and neutrinos that show up here on Earth, why doesn't this stuff do anything to anything here on Earth? Why doesn't it emit gamma rays here too? How do I build a "transmitter" of "dark matter"? How do I verify this new particle has the various properties you claim? For instance, how do I know it experiences "longevity" and doesn't decay into something else we already observe in less than a millisecond? How can I verify it emits gamma rays in an empirical test?
As DRD points out, your own analogy demolishes your position.
Neutrinos were posited to explain yet another mysterious deficit (missing energy and momentum in certain radioactive decays, in that case).
There was zero direct evidence for their existence, they had never been detected, and their properties were hypothetical and almost completely unknown. By your logic, they should never have been proposed, never investigated, they weren't science.
Because if it did, it wouldn't be dark matter. One of the things we know about dark matter is that it's very stable (has a long lifetime), otherwise it would have decayed.
For now, by looking in the right places. Eventually, perhaps by creating it in an accelerator.
You keep missing the point, and denying history.
Helium was detected "in the lab" after it was discovered in the Sun.
Neutrino oscillations were observed "in the lab" after they were confirmed as a consistent explanation of the solar neutrino problem.
The inverse square nature of (Newtonian) gravitation was confirmed "in the lab" well after the theory was first published.
GR was not tested "in the lab" until well after it was confirmed as a consistent explanation for several sets of astronomical observations.
I think I see your problem - you are stuck with the science that was taught to you in school many years ago. You have forgotten to learn,
especially about the new discoveries that changed this original concept for dark matter.
Dark matter was considered to be "missing matter" from 1933 when Zwicky found that there as not enough matter measured in galactic clusters to explain the orbital motion of galaxies. This is the concept that was taught in schools for the next 40 years.
Then in 1975, came Rubin's observation that the velocity dispersions of galaxies also needed dark matter. This could also be "missing matter"
but 40 years of improving observational techniques made this doubtful.
Further advances in observation techniques since then finally broke the association of dark matter with "missing matter".
The biggest observational straw was that fact that the leading candidate for this (MACHO's) have been detected but not at a level high enough to explain dark matter.
The real observations that showed that dark matter could not be normal matter (i.e. "missing matter") are the colliding galactic clusters of Bullet Cluster and MACS J0025.4-1222 (and even Abell 520).
Here is the situation in the observations in a simplified form:
- A is a big blob of gas.
- B is a bib blob of gas.
- Blob A hits blob A.
He also mentions the fact that astronomers measure the mass distribution of galactic clusters and see that the majority of matter is not visible.
Evidence?
Astronomers have known about interstellar dust for a while, but they haven't been able to quantify just how much light it blocks. Now a team of researchers has studied a catalogue of galaxies and found that dust shields roughly 50 percent of their light.
"I was shocked by the sheer scale of the effect," said Simon Driver, an astronomer from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland who led the study. "Most people just kind of said, 'We suspect dust is a minor problem.' I spent much of my career working on deep images from Hubble and I've always ignored dust almost entirely."
The result will likely cause many astronomers to revise their calculations of the intrinsic brightness of many celestial objects, Driver said. Until now, many astronomers thought stars and galaxies were really about 10 percent brighter in optical light than they appeared because of dust. If the new findings are true, it turns out that objects in the sky are about twice as bright than they appear.
"This is a strong, clear-cut result," Driver told SPACE.com. "We've really got to take dust seriously and we've got to make large adjustments to our magnitude calculations." (A magnitude scale is used to define brightness of celestial objects.)
Why should they need to, if they have no relevance?
But they didn't at the time they were proposed. What is it that you don't understand about this really really basic argument?No, your own two analogies demolish your position, not mine. Whereas neutrinos and gravity show up in lab, your mythical "dark matter" dohickies do not.
Controlled experiments demonstrate the need for matter that only interacts weakly. This could be SUSY particles. On the other hand, it may not be.Ya, *CONTROLLED* experiments demonstrated that A) either a law of physics was being violated, or B) there was in fact a new particle required to explain that loss of energy.
That probably depends on whether you think we should be looking for GUTs. There's also the small matter of the hierarchy problem which you might like to stick in your favourite search engine.Notice that not a single "controlled" experiment ever required a SUSY particle to explain it
Exactly the same with dark matter. Either our law of gravity is being violated or a new particle is required. You're not helping your argument here.Boloney. Empirical controlled experiments made it clear that either a law of physics was violated (highly unlikely) or a new particle was in order (more likely).
Uh-huh. You really don't this science malarkey do you. You're arguing against the existence of something because we don't know that it exists for definite. If we always did this we'd have no science at all.There as a *SOURCE* identified and a METHOD of observing their direct influences on controlled experiments. You can't identify a source of SUSY particles. You don't even know if they exist at all!
The properties of gravity that were noticed by Newton at the time, like the -2 dependance were completely impossible to measure at the time in a lab. It took centuries for this to be rectified.Gravity isn't shy around the lab so DRD's analogy is also meaningless.
Its not metaphysics at all.You're both comparing metaphysical apples to empirical oranges.
Nope completely wrong. The lightest particle in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (for instance) is stable. That is, the simplest possible extension that we can make to the Standard Model to include supersymmetry gives a stable supersymmetric partner. This is in no way made up. Its a consequence that is dependent only on our knowledge of the SM, QM and the assumption that the Universe is supersymmetric.Correction: One of the things you *NEED* from you ad hoc gap filler is longevity because without it, your theory is toast. You therefore "made up" a "necessary property" for your mythical gap filler, in this case longevity.
Nope. Completely wrong. Why do you continue to argue against something you have no idea about in such an agressive manner?It was a property you created based on *NEED* not upon "observation" in a lab.
None of these, R-parity conservation.Even if we do ever find a SUSY particle in a collider experiment, how do you know it's going to last even a full millisecond before reverting into something we already know about? Pure faith? Ad hoc need? What?
It does have an effect - the intrinsic brightness of many celestial objects may have been underestimated. That is what the paper states.So you're telling me that it is absolutely irrelevant that we've been underestimating the amount of brightness by such a significant percentage? It has *NO* affect whatsoever on our mass estimation of a galaxy?
Even if this article turns out to be correct and intrinsic brightness is used to calculate the mass of galaxies (I have my doubts about this) then stars become about 1% of the mass in the Universe. Dark matter then makes up the remaining 24% to 29% of gravitational mass.Although there are other ways to measure mass gravitationally, these are the main ones. They all give the same answer, too: about 25% to 30% of the total energy in the Universe is some form of gravitational mass. But what of the stars? It turns out that stars are only about 0.5% of the mass in the Universe.
So you're telling me that it is absolutely irrelevant that we've been underestimating the amount of brightness by such a significant percentage? It has *NO* affect whatsoever on our mass estimation of a galaxy?
Fixed your post.Even more damaging IMO:
http://cmarchesin.blogspot.com/2009/08/galaxies-demand-stellar-recount.html
Given thesefactsnews articles, how can you expect me to believe that we already know how much ordinary matter exists in a distant galaxy?
By comparing the paper to the PR, it is easy to see why one should always go to the primary source, especially when trying to draw inferences that are beyond what is stated.
I'll write more about this in later posts, but the techniques used to estimate total mass in galaxies are many and varied, and they give consistent answers (albeit sometimes the uncertainties are big).
Wrt this particular paper, a possible implication concerning the estimated total baryonic mass in a galaxy is: if you use a combo of estimated SFR and IMF to derive a (baryonic) mass estimate, you may have introduced a systematic error; specifically, the IMF for LSBs (low surface brightness) galaxies may be significantly different from the IMF for other galaxies (and even this is too extreme; the paper reports only estimates of the top part of the IMF, specifically O and B stars).
Now here is the crux of the story … All of this was done well BEFORE the neutrino was directly observed.
How is this ANY DIFFERENT from the situation now?
Well for a start, for stars of ~ 1 solar mass the mass luminosity relationship gives:
L/Lsun = (M/Msun)4
Or
M/Msun= (L/Lsun)0.25
So even if we were underestimating the luminosity of a star by a factor of 2, we'd underestimating the mass of the star by a factor of just 1.2. So no, it doesn't make a great deal of difference.
It does have an effect - the intrinsic brightness of many celestial objects may have been underestimated. That is what the paper states.
IMO (as a non-astronomer) I would say that this has *NO* effect whatsoever on our mass estimation of a galaxy.
But the mass estimation of galaxies is only one part of the detection of dark matter. Most of the normal matter in the universe turns out to be intergalactic medium, i.e. plasma.
I think your (total?) inability to grasp that theories are quantitative means you cannot, and will not, understand this.[...]
And again with the ridiculous analogies. Gravity is not shy around a lab. DM never shows up in a lab. See the difference?The inverse square nature of (Newtonian) gravitation was confirmed "in the lab" well after the theory was first published.
You realise that you just allowed for a cosmological constant (Λ) explanation for dark energy, don't you?GR was not tested "in the lab" until well after it was confirmed as a consistent explanation for several sets of astronomical observations.
Yes ,but again "gravity" shows up here on Earth, and therefore I'm sure it occurs "out there" in space too. I have no doubt that gravity exists and has an effect on matter. Compare and contrast that to your mythical matter.
You're clearly missing the key point DRD. Gravity isn't shy around the lab. I'm therefore happy to let you point at the sky and claim "gravity did it" and I'll consider your math formulas to be "useful" in determining how well your mathematical model matches nature's expression of "gravity". [...]
But they didn't at the time they were proposed. What is it that you don't understand about this really really basic argument?
Controlled experiments demonstrate the need for matter that only interacts weakly.
The *important* difference is that even the very postulation of a neutrinos came about as a direct result of *EMPIRICAL EXPERIMENTS* which directly measured the energy output of the beta decay process.
... snipped non-science stuff,,,.