WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!!
This thread's last post was 26 March, 2008 ... I am raising it from its slumber ...
First, I want to correct something that was said about the middle of the thread: the first evidence of DM came NOT from galaxy rotation curves, but from application of the virial theorem by Zwicky, way back in the 1930s, to the Coma cluster of galaxies.
Second, the history of DM is by no means a nice, clear, straight line - as befits a story in which the players are human, there is jealousy, ego, arrogance, and much more; there are mistakes, wrong turns, misunderstandings, and so on. For example, Zwicky had a very strong personality, perhaps even a quite unattractive one, while Oort was the perfect gentleman (yet Zwicky was right and Oort wrong); Vera Rubin was a young, female, grad student (so her 'contrarian' findings on galaxy rotation had to await a senior male scientist's corroboration before they were accepted; note too the irony of her Princeton honorary degree); and so on. There are several good books which cover both the history and the evidence,
the one by Ken Freeman for example.
Third, galaxy halos contain a trivial amount of DM, in the grand scheme of things; in (rich) galaxy clusters, the mass in between the galaxies is far greater than that in the galaxies, so even if, somehow, it turns out galaxies have little or no DM (highly unlikely), the large-scale ('universal') implications would be essentially nil. In fact, 'dark' baryonic matter (the kind of stuff stars, planets, gas, plasma, and dust are made of) considerably overwhelms the stuff that you can see with your eyes (or telescopes).
Fourth, no one in this thread has even sketched just how extraordinary the evidence for DM actually is ... and the marketing types who write breathless Press Releases (or articles in New Scientist), which robinson has so enthusiastically quoted, seem to have no interest in trying to explain this.
Take rich clusters, as just one example.
From measurements of the line of sight motion of galaxies, you can use high school physics to estimate the total mass in the clusters in which they reside; this is what Zwicky did, and has been done thousands of times since. That estimated mass is far, far greater than what you get if you simply add up the light from all those galaxies and estimate the mass of stars that must be producing it (adding in dust and gas/plasma in the galaxies makes no difference worth commenting on).
Fast forward many decades, and you learn that these same (rich) clusters of galaxies emit lots of x-rays. Apply textbook physics, undergrad level this time, and you discover that most of the (baryonic) mass in these clusters, again hundreds or thousands of them, is in the thin gas/plasma between the galaxies, not the galaxies themselves.
... and you learn that the total mass of the clusters is the same (to within the various uncertainties) as that you estimate from Zwicky-type observations!
... and that this total mass is ~5 times greater than the estimated baryonic mass.
Do not skip lightly over this; two completely independent methods of observation, using quite different parts of the physics textbook produce the same result! How extraordinary.
But wait! There's more!!
By painstakingly analysing the shapes of galaxies behind rich clusters, you can estimate the total mass in those clusters using yet another, completely independent method - gravitational lensing.
... and the results are, once again, the same: within the various uncertainties, the estimated mass of these clusters is the same as that derived from the virial theorem and from the x-ray observations (though there are, to date, only a handful of clusters analysed using this method).
... and that mass is, once again, ~5 times greater than the total estimated baryonic mass.
How extraordinary.
But wait!! There's more!!!
(to be continued)