sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
That does not alter my point one iota, in fact it makes my question that much more important. The physical infrastructure of each galaxy is going to "pass on through" just like your presumed "dark matter". RC seems to be under the impression that he can distinguish between "baryonic' and "non-baryonic" matter in these images, but that is simply *impossible*. You have no way to differentiate various types of matter in these sorts of lensing studies. Sooner or later I will drive that point home, but you'll have to stop skirting the direct questions.
They don't differentiate between them using lensing alone.
Have you actually read their paper, Michael? Do you know what we're talking about?
So they are going to act just like "dark matter" in their ability to "pass through' other objects and they will necessarily be inside that same blue blob where you claim "dark matter' is located.
Yes, to first approximation. That forms an important part of their analysis.
You *assume* that *all* forms of MACHO dark matter account for a tiny fraction of the mass, but how do you actually know that?
Microlensing surveys. MACHOs cannot form a significant fraction of the DM in the Milky Way.
That may be (probably is) the case with our own galaxy because we can track individual stars in our own galaxy, but how do we figure out what a distant black hole might contain in terms of total mass?
We don't even know for sure there are black holes at the centers of those galaxies. But if there are, we can put upper limits on their mass in many different ways. Not that it matters, because even an absurdly massive BH would not do away with the need for DM. We know the distribution of DM in typical galaxies, and it's a diffuse cloud, not a point mass.
The bottom line is that your trying to 'sell' our technology as being better than it is, and our knowledge of the universe as being 'more advanced' than it actually is.
Huh?
Until recently we didn't even believe that neutrinos had mass, yet now we believe they do. Surely that must account for some of that "missing mass", without resorting to "unknown" and "theoretical" forms of matter?
They do - neutrinos are a form of non-baryonic DM - which is an excellent example of how ridiculous your objections to DM are. Every one of them applied just as well before the discovery of neutrino masses as it did after (0=0). Unfortunately neutrinos make up a very small fraction of the total DM, so there must be something else too.