Reality Check
Penultimate Amazing
The non-magical dark energy.What pray tell is the rest made of? Please resist the need to stuff the gaps of your ignorance with useless terms like magic energy.
That is right. The masses of stars are estimated from measurements.You didn't "measure" the mass of the stars, you "estimated" the mass of the stars. Those estimate were based upon a whole host of assumptions like the amount of light absorbed by dust, etc, all of which have now been shown to be "questionable" at best.
Your ignorance is showing again. You obviously did not read the papers or the comments of more knowledgeable posters (unlike you or me).
These papers are about making the estimates more accurate. The question is whether the mass in galaxies is out by a factor of 60 as you claim (to account for the measured/estimated mass).
Right again - The amount of IGM is eastimated from measurements.Again, this too is 'assumed' and/or "estimated", it is not "measured".
The mass estimation techniques (you know the ones that agree on the mass) are not "that far off". They are certainly not a factor of 60 off. If you have evidence of this then present it. All you have presented is a couple of news articles that imply a small effect, i.e. off by 20% (a factor of 1.2!) and off by some factor in specfic types of galaxies.I can understand that when a mass estimation technique is that far off, it's time to give it a proper scientific burial and call it "falsified" once and for all. Evidently we need some new mass estimation techniques that jive with the lensing data?
All the rest of your post is evidently based on the false belief that normal matter does not interact strongly electromagnetically with normal matter.All the rest of your "assumption" are evidently based on the false belief that we have accurately "measured" the amount of mass in a galaxy, when in fact we never did. We "estimated' that mass, and clearly we did a pitiful job that in no way agrees with the lensing data. One of the two "techniques" for "measuring" the mass of a galaxy is wrong, and one is correct. The lensing data is most likely to be "correct". The "estimation' process is most likely to be incorrect because it is based on far many more assumptions than the lensing data.
All this information tells us ultimately is that the mass estimation techniques we use today are nearly useless at determining that actual amount of mass in a galaxy. Period.
It does *not* tells us that *BOTH* methods of determining mass are correct as you are trying to claim! That is simply an "outrageous" claim IMO.
The observations of the Bullet Cluster, MACS J0025.4-1222 and (maybe) Abell 520 tell us that *BOTH* gravitational lensing and the mass estimation techniques are in agreement.
N.B. Once more: We are talkiing about the lensing data for galactic clusters where most of the mass is in the IGM - not the galaxies.
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