edd
Master Poster
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2007
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http://www.universetoday.com/75164/m31s-odd-rotation-curve/
In before someone else abuses the content.
In before someone else abuses the content.
http://www.universetoday.com/75164/m31s-odd-rotation-curve/
In before someone else abuses the content.
http://www.universetoday.com/75164/m31s-odd-rotation-curve/
In before someone else abuses the content.
They also say that their model is testable, via specific *quantitative* observations (they do not say 'look at this picture! It PROVES my theory!!).Neat! Note the (at first glance) careful and accurate use of ordinary science.
a) The authors identify a specific piece of data that's not currently well modeled. (They do not rail generically against "paradigms" or "ignorance".)
b) The authors cite the recent relevant data, and cite a large suite of attempts to explain that data, which makes it clear that there IS something that needs explaining. (They do not paste together fifteen random Google results as evidence for a vague epistemological problem.)
c) They do a *mathematical* comparison between (a) a clearly-stated magnetic force law and (b) numerical data, with error bars, from clearly-stated sources. The comparison is done in a standard way (chi-squared) and the result suggests that the agreement is good (chi^2 decreases from ~10 to ~1 with one added parameter). They do not insist that math is irrelevant or misleading.
d) They obtain a magnitude and direction for the magnetic field that would make their model work (4.6 uG along the circumference) and compare it to well-understood and specific observations (Faraday rotation) of exactly the systems they're modeling. (They do not avoid this discussion altogether.)
e) They do not discard dark matter. This model's inner disk is, as usual, dark matter dominated, and there's no indication of anything other than HI clouds experiencing the observed force.
The difference? Ruiz-Granados et. al. get their magnetic-field hypothesis published in ApJ Letters, while MM et. al. hang around JREF and complain that astronomers ignore magnetic fields.
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2011/18may_orphanplanets/
FYI, even less reason to believe in non-baryonic forms of "dark matter".![]()
Uh, no. Pay attention:
"The team estimates there are about twice as many free-floating Jupiter-mass planets as stars."
So if they're twice the number of stars, but they're much less massive than stars, then they cannot account for much of the missing mass.
Wrong: Since these orphan planets have not been detected in a lab (like dark matter has not yet been detected) and that is your primary criteria for the existence of anything, these orphan planets do not existhttp://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2011/18may_orphanplanets/
FYI, even less reason to believe in non-baryonic forms of "dark matter".![]()
!Uh, no. Pay attention:
"The team estimates there are about twice as many free-floating Jupiter-mass planets as stars."
So if they're twice the number of stars, but they're much less massive than stars, then they cannot account for much of the missing mass.
...
How do you look at data that says "planets are common enough to be 0.0001 of the Milky Way mass" and think it's a challenge for the dark matter hypothesis?
Uh, no. Pay attention:
"The team estimates there are about twice as many free-floating Jupiter-mass planets as stars."
So if they're twice the number of stars, but they're much less massive than stars, then they cannot account for much of the missing mass.
Several years ago (3?) we found out that the black holes in the center of galaxies are significantly larger than first estimated. Something like three years ago we found out that you folks grossly underestimated the amount of light and number of stars in a galaxy due to dust. For all you know there could be twice as many large stars in a galaxy as you first estimated.
Two years or so ago we found out that you grossly underestimated the number of smaller stars compared to the "larger" ones we could observe.
Now we find out that there are more detached Jupiter sized objects out there than here are stars in the heavens.
Even still, nothing has been done to rectify the "problems" in your "dark matter' theories, or to minimize the need for non-baryonic exotic forms of matter, not even a *SINGLE* percent. Why?
A factor of 2 won't save you. Especially if the distribution isn't right.
The discovery is based on a joint Japan-New Zealand survey that scanned the center of the Milky Way galaxy during 2006 and 2007, revealing evidence for up to 10 free-floating planets roughly the mass of Jupiter. The isolated orbs, also known as orphan planets, are difficult to spot, and had gone undetected until now. The planets are located at an average approximate distance of 10,000 to 20,000 light years from Earth.
I'm not looking to be "saved", I'm looking to see if you folks make any real attempt to minimize the need for exotic brands of matter now that you know for a fact that you've been grossly underestimating the amount of ordinary matter in a galaxy.
A few months ago you folks were telling me in this thread or one of the other threads that you'd already accounted for every chuck of material out there down to the size of a small moon.
How do you really expect me take you folks seriously when there is absolutely no attempt by the mainstream to even *MINIMIZE* the need for exotic mass, in spite of all these revelations that your baryonic mass estimated sucked royally?
A few months ago you folks were telling me in this thread or one of the other threads that you'd already accounted for every chuck of material out there down to the size of a small moon. We were talking about "rocks" at that point because our studies were "sooooooooo good". It turns out that until now even Jupiter sized "dark" objects have completely eluded you folks.
I just linked to, and re-explained, exactly that post.
The mass of the Milky Way is about 6x10^11 solar masses. We can account for less than ~1x10^11 solar masses by counting stars, dust, and gas. There's ~5x10^11 solar masses "missing", mostly in the Galactic halo.
Previous research did not say "we counted every last thing". I never said that it did. If you think I did, you're lying or confused or both. Quote me if you disagree.
What does research say? As I said, by the mid-1990s, research said whatever MACHOs/rocks/black holes are out there, they don't add up to 5x10^11 solar masses. By 2003 or so we said they don't add up to even 0.25x10^11 solar masses. Now we're saying that MACHOs do add up to ~0.0005 x 10^11 solar masses.
Please note that this is precisely consistent with what I've said before. You misinterpreted it to make it sound wrong, and to make your own fantasies sound right? I'm not surprised, but that's your problem not mine.
STOP! This is far too much mathematics; draw a picture of a planet.