Imagine a dark matter version of our world trying to figure out luminous matter lol
@lauralahaye76992 жыл бұрын
And they getting mad over the fact in doesn't interact with the non-light!
@Noname-w7f1e2 жыл бұрын
They wouldn’t know it is “light” as for them we would be “dark”!
@DivineHellas2 жыл бұрын
Spirits
@lauralahaye76992 жыл бұрын
@@DivineHellas what an appropriate name!
@sookendestroy1 Жыл бұрын
The dark matter periodic table over here looking edgy
@PronteCo2 жыл бұрын
Even if I take nothing else from this video, the notion that *neutrinos are dark matter so we have proof some of it exists* is mind-blowing. Mostly mind-blowing because it's the first time I've heard this, I still thought dark matter was only hypothesized, while I very well knew about neutrino-detecting labs.
@ericvosselmans56572 жыл бұрын
Neutrino's aren't dark matter in the Dark Matter sense . They have been predicted to be and are an integral part of physics since the 1930's.
@jedgrahek14262 жыл бұрын
Yes, it baffles me how rare that is for someone to say that simply and clearly, because it is the only thing precluding more fundamental questions like "isn't it possible that your models are just wrong?" that many people naturally have upon hearing everything else commonly said about Dark Matter and Energy.
@Noname-w7f1e2 жыл бұрын
Well neutrinos are more like dark-matter’s less shy relative. Even if neutrinos rarely interact with the other matter - they still do interact. The “true” dark matter doesn’t interact yet has a large gravitational impact on the normal matter - that’s what makes it a lot more strange than neutrinos!
@XxskidudekidxX2 жыл бұрын
@@Noname-w7f1e Thank you!! That gave me the clarity I was looking for
@Eris1234517 ай бұрын
OK technically Neutrinos must have mass but they aren't dark matter. This guy comes across as an idiot.
@pedrolima29702 жыл бұрын
Maybe the real dark matter were the friends we made along the way
@potatosmuggler79272 жыл бұрын
That's deep. That's what she said-Michael Scott
@dustinclark33902 жыл бұрын
Nice 👍
@ArnoId-Schwarzenegger2 жыл бұрын
stupid is intelligent
@DivineHellas2 жыл бұрын
That’s racist
@TOMIOKA_GIYUU936Ай бұрын
🤣🤣
@highcoldstar2 жыл бұрын
I'm grateful for y'all's contagious excitement. Personally, this vid is an important and beautiful reminder that we're all starstuff, figuring things out one mystery at a time. It made me proud of humans, and not many things have done that lately. I appreciate your time and knowledge! 🙏🌌
@Fortunes.Fool.2 жыл бұрын
I would love being friends with a guy like him.
@bakertpaul2 жыл бұрын
Hey new friend!
@draculamihawk39812 жыл бұрын
Me too
@Jet_Threat2 жыл бұрын
I wanna go dark matter hunting with him. If we plan right and are really, really, sneaky-we just might catch a glimpse.
@TheHonestPeanut2 жыл бұрын
Play D&D more.
@ericvosselmans56572 жыл бұрын
Hey new friend!
@lyledal2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Sutter! That guy is everywhere and and that is AWESOME!
@MarkInTheAir2 жыл бұрын
This guy can literally wake me up in the middle of the night and lecture me about this stuff and I would not mind it at all. Such a pleasant way of teaching
@snarfulhusocks16882 жыл бұрын
He's everywhere like Dark Matter
@feenixhealthcare73702 жыл бұрын
You did a wonderful job with the explanations. It was funny and informative, which is a hard line to walk.
@Imaworldstar-jw3yj2 жыл бұрын
Oh...i am studying english online be my friend
@Jet_Threat2 жыл бұрын
@@Imaworldstar-jw3yj How are your studies going?
@noahtipton73022 жыл бұрын
Is it possible that dark matter doesn't consist of particles? Could gravitational effects be more akin to fields interacting in some unknown way?
@Fabelaz2 жыл бұрын
The presenter ruled out the modified gravity explanation at the beginning. However, I remember Sabine Hossenfelder talking about it in this video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/apDUe6OqrM6eiMU . It might answer this question for you (or give more questions to ask).
@epicbronyl23952 жыл бұрын
I was wondering something similar.
@frosted10302 жыл бұрын
Fields interacting is matter.
@noahtipton73022 жыл бұрын
@@frosted1030 that's why I said in an unknown way.
@frosted10302 жыл бұрын
@@noahtipton7302 It would be known if there was an answer. Could it? Who knows. No way to tell.
@dillanwhite66672 жыл бұрын
This is a such a cool video, the intro makes this feel like it's an HBO special! The rest feels like a seminar haha but an interesting one
@philosopherstoned420 Жыл бұрын
💯
@KSCPMark67422 жыл бұрын
Strictly speaking, at 8:02 it'd not be "proving one of these hypotheses right", it would be "eliminating many of these hypotheses". I always understood scientific theory to mean that a hypothesis can be proven wrong, but it can't be proven right
@malaven112 жыл бұрын
making a repeatable experiment with observable and replicable results most certainly proves a theory to be correct or incorrect or at least correct to our level of measurement and understanding. think about something simple like theorizing how gases change volume at different temperatures. do a bunch of experiments, plot the data, and you'll see the relationship is PV=nRT. before Boyle conducted experiments to prove his ideal gas law, it was a theory as to how the items functioned.
@peterjohnson94382 жыл бұрын
A hypothesis will be shown to either hold or not hold, i.e. be correct or incorrect. If it is shown to be incorrect, a new hypothesis is formed. Once you gather enough understanding of a phenomenon, you can formulate a theory - a logical/mathematical model of how that phenomenon behaves. The theory should be able to explain observed behavior and accurately predict future behavior as the parameters change. If behavior is observed that does not fit with an established theory that's worked reliably up until that observation is made, a lot more investigation, measuring and examination needs to take place to make sure the observed results are accurate. At that point, the theory will need to be adjusted (maybe it was missing a parameter that had very little contribution up until now?) or a new, better theory needs to be formed. Even theories that don't work in extreme scales can be useful for normal needs, as they are usually simpler than a more correct theory that works over a greater value range - such as Newtonian mechanics and general relativity. If you go very large (planetary/stellar scale), Newtonian mechanics will give incorrect results, whereas general relativity will match reality better. Newtonian mechanics will still be accurate enough if you need to figure out the mechanics of a car on a hill, or the trajectory of a cannonball. The third term in this group is "law" - and a law of mathematics or physics is usually a (relatively) simple observation that has never been shown to be false. For example, energy in a closed system will remain constant - it can be moved around and it can change form, but no new energy can be created and no energy can be destroyed. There's a multitude of international physics prizes you can win if you can demonstrate a law of physics being incorrect.
@MoRiley92 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful video, and Paul Sutter is always smart, fun, and entertaining,
@Jet_Threat2 жыл бұрын
His awesome energy makes me highly aware that I'm sitting and stuffing my face
@chinazomejingiri43902 жыл бұрын
The fact that dark matter doesn’t interact with matter , just breaks my brain , and I love it 😂
@timokimo82062 жыл бұрын
Its kinda black magic
@antasosam84867 ай бұрын
Actually it does
@nodarkthings4 ай бұрын
It's almost like it doesn't exist
@Indyofthedead2 жыл бұрын
I have many questions mainly to do with observable phenomena that we should see more of that we don't, or so I believe. 1. If dark matter interracts with gravity, should it or why does it not attract itself to create dark matter bodies like planets or stars? If it does, shouldn't we possibly see galaxies with invisible cores or with significantly less stars for their size than they should? 2. If it doesn't react with its own gravitational field, then why would they interact with gravitational fields from visible matter. Would that then make dark matter a universal filler like aether? If so, why would galaxies stay connected since the force of gravity would be diffused throughout the universe and galaxies are only traveling through clusters that make them stable but then they're annihilated once they leave the higher concentrated areas? 3. Assuming that dark matter cannot react to the gravity fields of itself but can react with with those made by visible matter, then wouldn't we see different concentrations in planetary cores? Why wouldn't we see celestial bodies with significantly more gravitational force than others of a similar or exact same mass? Would it even be possible to calculate a universal gravitational constant associated with visible matter? On that note, if it makes up 80%-90% of the universe, wouldn't we also be able to detect more black holes and even black holes that don't have enough mass to sustain the gravitational force necessary to sustain one to begin with? Even if they're small enough that the Hawkin's Radiation, then shouldn't we be able to detect smaller spontaneous black holes being created all the time? 4. Assuming dark matter has the properties of the 3rd point, then we could assume that in the creation of the solar system that there would be a ring of it orbiting around the Earth or any of the other planets or even sun (or a sphere if it can't collide with itself) creating a gravitational field that would be easiest to detect with a sensor on a satellite? On that note, if it can't collide with itself, wouldn't there be a similar sphere around the galaxy that would have the mass necessary to rip stars and systems out of their current orbits around all galaxies, in different vectors so that disc-shaped galaxies would be rare? 5. How do we explain the existance of galaxies without dark matter, ones where their mass is sufficient to sustain orbit? Theories persist that their dark matter was stripped by nearby galaxies, but- considering the abundance of it-why would it leave any of the visible matter behind instead of the galaxies merging? Please help me understand the theoretical properties of dark matter since I've had a ridiculously hard time finding any information on the subject, instead, just the evidence we've seen that leads us to assume its existence.
@topdeckhelix8450 Жыл бұрын
Awesome vid, love your passion and the wacky camera action keeps it exciting.
@nielsdaemen Жыл бұрын
I've always wondered: what happens to dark matter when it hits a black hole? Since black holes are just extremely curved spacetime this should affect dark matter as well...
@marctrottier37322 жыл бұрын
...A new must watch channel...
@Fabelaz2 жыл бұрын
good presentation of the material
@4or8712 жыл бұрын
Combine: 1. Nxy = number of superpositions per m^2= wave function frequency 2. Cosmological constant in Dxy stretching spacetime [m^-2] = lp^2/λ^4= lp^2 Nxy ^2 [m^2] [m^-4] 3. Schrodinger solution 4. Einstein E= m c^2 Result: dark matter = superpositions (recoherence) of the neutrino (Axion?) which gives the neutrino extra mass Dxy = lp^2/λ^4= lp^2 Nxy^2 Nxy = sqrt(Dxy / lp^2)= (Dxy / lp^2) ^0.5 Nxy = sqrt ( 1.1056 10^-52 / 2.612 10^ -70) = 0.65 10^9 Schrodinger solution: Nxy^2 h^2 / ( 8 m L^2) = m c^2 8 m L^2 m c^2= Nxy^2 h^2 m ^2= Nxy^2 h^2 /( 8 L^2 c^2) m = + - (Nxy^2 h^2 0.125 L^-2 c^-2)^0.5 m= (0.42 10^18 43.9 10^-68 8.99 10^-16)^0.5 = 166 10^-33 kg = 0.931 Mev/c^2 ( all superpositions). 1 particle = 166 10^-33/ ( 0.65 10^9) = 255 10^-42 kg = 0.143 10^-3 eV/c^2 Axion? dark matter = superpositions (recoherence) of the neutrino (Axion ?) which gives the neutrino extra mass Recoherence foton = dark matter? kzbin.info/www/bejne/a4qnc4ZtrcaaraM
@garykong75972 жыл бұрын
It reminds me during undergrad astronomy class, professor basically said we know a lot about the baryonic matter, only a little about dark matter and almost nothing about dark energy...
@duanedaxalexander2 жыл бұрын
it’s almost like we’re fish trying to detect water
@Keith136ful2 жыл бұрын
Wow! Amazing episode. Great overview of DM and the efforts to find it. Also, fantastic production qualities but one small comment - lose the overhead camera. I heard from another presenter you probably know (Dr. Gay) that in addition to the lack of mass neutrinos are too hot to be a candidate for DM. Is there some theory that says massive neutrinos would be colder and a better candidate? One last question: Do you lecture at your university and are your lectures on-line?
@Imaworldstar-jw3yj2 жыл бұрын
Hello i am studying english online be my friend
@namyaoncamera2 жыл бұрын
wait so if dark matter were to prove the matter/anti-matter symmetry, would it be somewhat like anti-matter?
@Amigps012 жыл бұрын
Cool video but the constant switching to weird camera angles is really disorienting and off putting. I'd recommend to limit that in the future.
@malaven112 жыл бұрын
forehead cam was a confusing choice
@Jet_Threat2 жыл бұрын
But it shows off his best angles! (which is all of them).
@Jet_Threat2 жыл бұрын
@@malaven11 An excellent choice*
@zekken9872 жыл бұрын
For me it keeps me engaged in a really complex topic lol
@zenmasters_games2 жыл бұрын
Bro wtf. First he says dark matter cannot interact with "our" matter. Then suddenly it can and we are supposedly hunting for it.
@malaven112 жыл бұрын
we don't believe it interacts with light in a way we can observe. neutrinos don't interact with light and we can detect them, and are dark matter. we're looking for more or different types of dark matter to explain the excess or remainder. we haven't found out how to detect it yet. those statements weren't made abundantly clear.
@TheDankGoat2 жыл бұрын
dark matter does not interact electromagnetically, so it cannot collide with other matter and does not affect light, but it does interact gravitationally which is why we can detect it in the first place (the example of galaxies spinning faster than expected). Gravity is by far the weakest force so this makes it very hard to detect dark matter particles but easy to see their combined effects on galaxy scales.
@robbo5802 жыл бұрын
They should call this "theory" dork matter.
@scottd72222 жыл бұрын
The earth is Flat. Dark matter is the aether and waters above. Space is not an infinite vacuum. Earth is the center of the cosmic universe which rotates around Polaris
@inspectorsteve22872 жыл бұрын
Great video. I get it now.
@JT-Works2 жыл бұрын
I like the idea that dark matter is gravity bleeding through from the other dimensions where the laws of physics are ever so slightly different.
@pali1H2 жыл бұрын
That's a great theory.
@JT-Works2 жыл бұрын
Thanks, other dimensions with different laws of physics seems likely because our universe has certain values tied to the laws of physics (stong force, weak force, etc) that make our universe with it's stars and planets possible. Now that could be because of intelligent design (sounds nice, but unlikely), or there are multiple universes and we happen to be in the one where these values make everything we know possible.
@etherealradar2 жыл бұрын
this is more or less the answer staring the overthinkers in the face.
@riyashrivastava1460 Жыл бұрын
Seriously, it is hard for me to understand what they said in this video. But i am just fascinated by the name dark matter. Recently got interested in the science stuff. Got a google many of the things they have mentioned in the video.
@philippejacquot92702 жыл бұрын
Love your work ❣️
@bakertpaul2 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@dond668 Жыл бұрын
Why do stars form like pearls on a necklace? Can you measure the fields located between the stars from this string of pearls? This incredibly powerful Birkeland Current is missing from your equation.
@juansolo74852 жыл бұрын
Is dark matter so diffuse that its spread across the solar system in even density? Or does it interact with gravitational waves in such a way that it can orbit bodies or even sink inside of them? Am I made entirely of baryonic matter, or is there a certain amount of dark matter clinging to my mass? Are there experiments we can do with things like testing angular momentum/ launching a projectile in a vacuum to see expected arcs and movement if we only accounted for baryonic matter? I got so many questions
@michaelpettersson49192 жыл бұрын
So the reason why the neutrinos isn't the dark matter is that there isn't enough of it? Could it be that there isn't a single dark matter particle but a whole group of dark matter particles? If so then the neutrinos could be one of them.
@TheShattenjager2 жыл бұрын
That’s exactly what we currently think. Neutrinos are sort of just one tiny bit of dark matter that we can actually detect. Sort of.
@topdeckhelix8450 Жыл бұрын
Has to be something like this. Similar to how we have paired particles with (let’s say for fun) “the positive scale” of protons, neaturons, etc. it stands to reason that dark matter will have a multiple particles. Truly we may never be able to understand it.
@望月みつる-v1q2 жыл бұрын
where can I buy this book
@shaundubai89412 жыл бұрын
Why is this not on Paul Sutter channel?
@pauldevan7245 Жыл бұрын
When we were first starting to look at the quantum world. One of the 1st questions we asked were thing discreet ( like peas ) or was it continuous ( like mashed potatoes). Should we be asking the same questions when looking at dark matter or dark energy? Just a thought 🤔
@energyideas8 күн бұрын
Presenter seems to be hung up on it being a particle. Does it help to consider it as dark gravity instead of dark matter?
@CACBCCCU2 жыл бұрын
Dr. Thomas Charles Van Flandern, an expert in celestial mechanics, but apparently politically constrained in what he could say, indicated different frequencies are due to different light speeds, and at the time it made no sense to me as I took it to mean he was saying there were multiple light speeds at the same point in space. Eventually it became apparent to me that lightspeed could be gravity sensitive, that it gravitationally speeds up to gravitationally blueshift. After that, what Van Flandern said made perfect sense to me, he was talking about the same photon under different gravities. The only argument against variable light speed might as well be attributed to a revolutionary flatworm creation of bent-spacetime groomers, a theoretical decay effect of light bending, as if light and gravity fields cannot exchange energies directly.
@RogersGirl882 жыл бұрын
All matter and energy hold the potentiality for spawning life which leads to variables whose actions can be altered based on their observation of the universe. Dark matter cannot form in such a way that it’s byproduct (life) can become affected by observation of the universe. If we break all life down as nothing more than matter and energy with varying degrees of behavioral predictability, we find that reacting to the universe is itself the missing variable in the equations.
@princek.84052 жыл бұрын
Loved the video ❤️🙏
@clientesinformacoes63642 жыл бұрын
If space time twist like galaxies, it will be more dense towards the center, or dark matter is another space time structure, same particles, but different structure.
@RahulSharma-ih8pi2 жыл бұрын
Dark matter is key to observing different points in time at the same space.
@bishamsingh40232 жыл бұрын
The weight of the stuff in the fish tank includes or excludes the dark matter in the tank?
@shawns07622 жыл бұрын
There is an "elephant in the room" explanation for those abnormally high star rotation rates. Einstein explained it in the 1939 journal "Annals of Mathematics". Wherever you have an astronomical quantity of mass "dilation" (sometimes called gamma or y) will occur. Mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. General relativity does not predict singularities when you factor in dilation. Einstein repeatedly spoke about this that's why nobody believed in black holes when he was alive. There is no place in the universe where mass is more concentrated than at the center of a galaxy. 99.8% of the mass in our solar system is in the sun. 99.9% of the mass in an atom is in the nucleus. If these norms are true for galaxies than we can infer that there is 100's of trillions of solar masses at the center of high mass galaxies. There is no way to know through observation, there is far too much interference, dilation and gravitational lensing. High mass means high momentum. If we attribute a radius to these numbers than we can calculate that relativistic velocities exist in these regions. The mass at the center of our own galaxy is dilated, in some sublime way that mass is all around us, there is no direction you can point your finger that you are not pointing to it. There is no "mystery" mass, there is just mass at differing degrees of dilation. Low mass galaxies have normal star rotation rates. This is what relativity would predict because there is an insufficient quantity of mass for relativistic velocities to be achieved. This is proof that Einstein is correct, there can be no other explanation for this fact. Einstein formulated relativity before the existence of galaxies was known. It is clear that the mass is dilated through the galaxy and not the universe as a whole. It exists everywhere and every when the galaxy has been. It is the cosmic backround radiation. There is no black holes or dark matter, there is just relativity.
@159973592 жыл бұрын
Could also be the the noise signal to the generating function sequencing the wave function-simulating our universe
@jc_alpha5 ай бұрын
9:34 “[…] and wait, a really long time […]” Why would we whale to wait a really long time if dark matter is all around us all the time? Wouldn’t it make sense that we would see its effects immediately?
@shivakumarv3019 ай бұрын
What are the products of fusion? Do they produce something that when they travel to deep space where temperature goes down they form dark matter and dark energy?
@Enoch9500bc2 жыл бұрын
If regular matter equals energy then antimatter also equals anti-energy. What if this anti-energy state doesn't interact with the regular matter/energy, the way anti'matter' does, but it behaves like dark energy instead? What if dark energy is anti-energy form of antimatter?
@stephendatgmail2 жыл бұрын
Antimatter is “regular matter” in this sense and still “equals” energy. It’s just normal matter with opposite electric charge to what we are mostly surrounded by and made up of.
@vesaversion2982 жыл бұрын
We are beginning from the assumption that Relativity is correct. But if it can't explain the existence of 85% of matter of the universe, is it possible that the theory is fundamentally wrong? Instead of looking at the mystery of the 'dark matter', could it be that our glasses with which we were looking at them was faulty in the first place?
@palikliment98146 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks! :)
@dmprdctns2 жыл бұрын
Ha! Cash register sound when his book appears... Hilarious... Well done.
@robz5512 жыл бұрын
I still don’t get it
@radicalpaddyo2 жыл бұрын
So the Victorian idea of a sea of "ether" was at least not too far off the mark.
@RaonakDM2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if dark matter could actually be bumps in the curvature of spacetime.
@ssankar710622 күн бұрын
2:45 dark matter doesn't interact with normal matter, but it interacts with the stars (normal matter?) and keeps them in the galaxy !!! 1:26 but, so much of evidence!
@jamescabral10922 жыл бұрын
I feel like it's more like a state between solid and liquid with property of a blanket if you stretch it out it when you put a object in the middle then it will have a equal amount of mass to hold it
@itcantbetrueable Жыл бұрын
No James, that's not it. Watch the video again. Dark matter can't be explained by wild random guesses.
@sookendestroy1 Жыл бұрын
Given what I've learned about dark matter over the years none of the detection methods make sense anymore, we're trying to detect a matter type we cant see or interact with by looking for it and seeing if it interacts with normal matter. We know it interacts with gravity and therefore time because spacetime but we dont see it interacting with much else. Unless it interacts electromagnetically, say by causing chaotic perturbations in electromagnetic fields then gravitational detection may be the only way. My personal theory is that it's either just a new form of matter created by black holes and replacing normal matter as a new study suggests, a form of matter which sits in a higher dimension therefore it only interacts with certain fields such as gravity or it is a form of matter which isnt even in our universe, that we see actual matter but only the gravitational shadow of it from another universe overlapping with ours in a weird almost metaphysical way Also what if there are many different types of dark matter akin to our normal matters periodic table
@musicnationshay2 жыл бұрын
Can we try a different light source? Like a UV vs LED vs florescent.🤷🏾♀️but maybe at a specific temperature
@Flygangflygang2 жыл бұрын
One of my fav astrophysicist
@davidgarofalosteachingcorner2 жыл бұрын
I encourage people to check out Pavel Kroupa's latest interview on how the dark matter community is now more cultlike than ever (see Axioms on Trial for the video)
@scottd72222 жыл бұрын
The earth is flat. Dark matter doesn't exist because space is not an infinite vacuum
@scottdc21052 жыл бұрын
Hello, im doing some research into why dark matter is predicted. I understand that the origin is the discrepancy of galactic rotation curves or simply the speeds of the orbits dont calculate correctly taking into account the mass density. My question is this, is dark matter solely based on that and that only, the speeds were measured and its not normal. Anything else or is that it?
@konbankai85912 жыл бұрын
the lady was really excited on telling science stuff, you can see her smile
@jamesk8s1 Жыл бұрын
liked subscribed and belled.....this guy is really fun and entertaining in his delivery, and that helps complex information go down much more easily 👏 👍 super cool video and lesson!!!! 🤩
@JoshDisher2 жыл бұрын
What if it's just a function of the formulas governing the code of the planet-sized supercomputer our universe is simulated in? I keep thinking "reticulating splines" every time I see a graphic of the expansion of our universe.
@no-one37952 жыл бұрын
My brain melted. But it's is an interesting topic.
@foureyes91dn2 жыл бұрын
Will the James Webb Telescope help with the search for dark matter?
@malaven112 жыл бұрын
unlikley. it gathers data from visible light and related ultra-and-infra light waves. dark matter as we know so far does not interact with light.
@alwaysdisputin99302 жыл бұрын
Newsweek website says: _""Because we can detect dark matter only indirectly through its gravity, it has been difficult to determine what it is." JWST will be particularly useful in studying the dark halos-shells of this mysterious substance that surround most galaxies-around early galaxies. "Such early galaxies form in the first dark matter halos so by clarifying the nature of these early-forming gravitationally bound lumps of dark matter, JWST will constrain some theories on the nature of dark matter," said Primack. He continued by explaining that this could help determine between competing models of dark matter, "warm" dark matter models that say this substance is made up of small rapidly moving particles, & cold dark matter models which put forward larger, slower moving particles. So observing the abundance of these galaxies could help determine which set of models is accurate, & while not solving the dark matter mystery, setting researchers on a path that may lead to that solution."_
@dillanwhite66672 жыл бұрын
Probably not since it's focused on detecting IR light and has a sun shield to protect the detectors from the sun's light/radiation, but who knows, they might detect gravitational lensing, which is a physical effect of light bending around gravity wells or massive objects
@ericvosselmans56572 жыл бұрын
The apparent effect of Dark Matter might 'just' as well be our complete lack of understanding of some key aspect of the Universe. Like that story some time ago with the Michelson-Morley experiment. Mind you ,I will never doubt the knowledge and education of a professional astrophysicist, but it's not like Dark Matter hasn't been searched for!
@scottd72222 жыл бұрын
Yes because we are not in an infinite vacuum. The Earth is Flat.
@MostlyPennyCat6 ай бұрын
Maybe dark matter is where all the antimatter went. There was a 50:50 split and at first, both matter and antimatter started to decay into dark matter. Matter became neutrinos Anti matter became heavy dark matter But, due to a slight bit of decay asymmetry, more antimatter decayed that matter, which in turn accelerated that rate until all the antimatter was dark matter and matter stopped becoming neutrinos.
@MostlyPennyCat6 ай бұрын
Oh hey, it was mentioned as a possibility in the video too! 😅
@capjus2 жыл бұрын
For me it looks more in favor to a mond theory. It seems like the gravity force as we know doesnt fit for distances for far beyond 10k light years. Everything actually and simply fails after that, therefore the anomalies with all galaxy rotation curves, clusters and deep universe - therefore dark matter, therefore dark energy. Additionally, we still cant combine gravitational force with other fundamental forces of nature. Thats very obvious for me that our thought of gravity is simply wrong. I am very sure of that. I think gravity as we understand so far with all its calculations is just simply a side effect caused by something else that we havent discovered yet, but requires to extend. The gravitational lense must be caused by some other effects, if you compare it in the bullet cluster, the fields at that scale must be influenced differently than the gravity field of Xray smooth distribution, and the momentum could also work differently, also the expansion of universe could cause some anomalies in between them. Sticking on dark matter and dark energy is like sticking on a geocentric view. I think the accelerated expansion of the universe is a normal thing, just our understanding of gravity is simply wrong. As there was no ether either, same also no dark matter
@samhain93942 жыл бұрын
Your grammar is atrocious. Where'd you go to school?
@arrogantpublisher2 жыл бұрын
My first thought exactly. Most probably you don't need to invent an imaginary material to explain unexpected gravitational behavior.
@sylvainr0 Жыл бұрын
Correction to what is said at 1:57: We *don't* know if dark matter exists. I stop looking at this point.
@RTL2L2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@waves_under_stars2 жыл бұрын
It's funny that many of the commenters here think they can explain astrophysical phenomenons better than most astrophysicists
@pierreo332 жыл бұрын
By looking at KZbin comments you can clearly see how humanity ignored Darwinism
@noanyobiseniss74622 жыл бұрын
Its funny that you think Newtonian physics should be a basis to explain reality.
@waves_under_stars2 жыл бұрын
@@noanyobiseniss7462 and where, exactly, did I say that?
@astrosales3862 жыл бұрын
Assuming the assumptions made in interpreting the measurements are correct, which implies there is a lot of "extra invisible mass" in the universe, then that "dark matter" is simply ordinary matter which is too dark to observe by current instruments! For example, comparing old photographs of galaxies, with modern deep imaging, reveals far more faint material in the outer parts of all of the galaxies. This explains that the "discrepant" galaxy rotation curve rates found by Vera Rubin are due to faint ordinary matter, not some elusive exotic "dark matter" which extensive search has failed to identify.
@dimi12422 жыл бұрын
I really want to everything about the universe. It seems so interesting,scary and fun.
@bruce14372 жыл бұрын
Excellent, thanks 😊
@galimirnund65432 жыл бұрын
I'm glad he mentioned 'theory' at one point.
@BrickleYourFrickle2 жыл бұрын
theory doesn't make it automatically untrue. In fact quite the opposite. People say "evolution is just a theory" like it's some kind of gotcha, when in reality, they don't understand what the word theory actually means and just look even more foolish.
@mayura_athukorala Жыл бұрын
great dear! you nailed it
@TheFXofNewton2 жыл бұрын
So can you explain away the dark matter viscosity problem?
@molai962 жыл бұрын
I might know a location where it can be found
@mattrogers8506 Жыл бұрын
I like this guy. Almost like a new Bill Nye but very much his own vibe
@jastrapper1902 жыл бұрын
It’s a math “fudge” we’re pretending is real until we figure out a better understanding of what gravity is. Like claiming you just sailed over an edge and vanished if you sailed in a straight line long enough before we learned the Earth was round.
@jamescabral10922 жыл бұрын
I have a few theories that I don't usually see on the internet
@empathy_is_only_human2 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry, but no, we don't know that dark matter exists. We can only infer it's presence. What we do know is that there is too much gravity given the amount of visible matter in galaxies we've studied. The theory that I think is far more likely is that this unexplained gravity is relativistic mass generated by the flow of spacetime past these large structures of galaxies, galaxy clusters, and the cosmic web. Incidentally this would also explain dark energy by inferring that as spacetime curves around these structures that a miniscule amount of kinetic energy is transferred to these structures thus powering the acceleration of the expansion of the universe. Such a model would also make it very clear as to why there is such a large disparity between the measurements of normal matter as compared to our calculations of dark matter(dark gravity) and dark energy.
@wolstentech2 жыл бұрын
I like this theory. The whole dark matter idea reminds me of how astronomers, ages ago, came up with wildly complicated "epicycles" theories to try to explain the motion of Earth relative to the Sun, all because they refused to believe in Heliocentrism. It seems much more likely that "dark matter" is really just exposing a gap in our physics knowledge, rather than some actual particle that exists.
@joshuagorecki47432 жыл бұрын
Quote "I'm sorry, but no, we don't know that dark matter exists. We can only infer it's presence." The planet Vulcan comes to mind
@empathy_is_only_human2 жыл бұрын
@@joshuagorecki4743 Okay, that's really funny given the fact that the Vulcans from Star Trek, were modeled after those, such as myself, with the personality type of INTJ. I'll take it as a compliment. Thank you.
@dillanwhite66672 жыл бұрын
We can only detect it INDIRECTLY, which is like knowing someone threw something into a pool because of the waves even if you didn't see the person or the object landing in the water. We know the object exists but we don't know what it was. But we can guess at it's mass because of the waves, splash sound, etc. We can detect it's effects, we just can't detect it itself.
@wolstentech2 жыл бұрын
@@dillanwhite6667 Waves do not prove that someone threw something into the pool. It only appears that way because you assume it must have been caused by an object thrown. But there are other ways to see the same effect, perhaps by some external force acting on the entire pool. This is like the question of gravity: does it exist at all? Or is it a side effect of the curvature of spacetime?
@nottellinganyoneanything2 жыл бұрын
I cannot see a good explanation how galaxies spin. How we know for sure that they spin like that? We've been observing them for how long 100 years at best? Most of them need 200'000'000 years do a spin. On the other hand, I know that galaxies are reaaaaaaaly far away. Their radius, compared by this distance is nothing, however many of them are in 10'000 of light years across. This definitely should add some distortion. I never seen any explanation why it does not distort what we perceive.
@RDeathmark2 жыл бұрын
Possibly it has something to do with making assumptions about the age of galaxies, the gravitational forces of the Luminous material of the galaxies and using those assumptions to calculate how much the spirals should have rotated versus how much rotation is observed, possibly also by comparing similar galaxies to each other and their spiral shapes and approximate ages and such
@scottd72222 жыл бұрын
The earth is Flat. You will never understand the universe and what it is until you get that stupid globe out ya head.
@A_Pink_Fish Жыл бұрын
I thought dark matter was completely invisible, cold, and collision-less because it was an atom(s) that was at the temperature 0 kelvin, so it didn’t have any energy to give off in the form of movement or light or anything that can be measured.
@thebonefish2 жыл бұрын
Puffs blunt, we are in a giant neutrino
@davidwinter91142 жыл бұрын
Here's My Hypothesis: We may be looking through a gravitational lens caused by our supermassive black hole at the center of the milky way galaxy. Perhaps this is warping the light from galaxies outside of our own, making them appear to be moving faster than they should, given their apparent masses. This local gravitational lensing may explain why only far distance reveals this speed discrepancy.
@empathy_is_only_human2 жыл бұрын
You have an interesting idea here. However gravitational lensing distorts the shape of the images we see, not the speed at which we see it unfold. You can see a similar effect by looking through the bottom of an empty coke bottle, through the bottle opening, at a light source. You'll see the image warp and stretch in strange ways. As to your idea here the way in which we know that this is not the case is via how well we can focus upon the light coming to us from these galaxies. The sharper and clearer the image, the more we know that we've properly corrected for the lensing effect of objects between us and the target object. Another way in which we measure the speed of stars within distant galaxies is via how extreme the red shift manifests itself. We know for instance that within the same galaxy that stars moving away from us with have a higher red shift value versus those that are moving towards us. A local instance of gravitational distortion simply would not account for all of these variables while still allowing us to see the image clearly.
@JavenarchX2 жыл бұрын
It's unmeasured light
@Google_Does_Evil_Now2 жыл бұрын
Is Dark Matter attracted by stars and other gravity, does it interact with gravity?
@jimgardoufy36472 жыл бұрын
What I'm interested in (being a power hungry General) is can we weaponize it?
@mocabe01 Жыл бұрын
09:20 rumor has it that Janna used to have straight hair... and then she became a physicist.
@craig24932 жыл бұрын
All the evidence says "dark matter" is obviously not matter. There is unexplained energy in the Universe that has a force similar to the gravity associated with matter. The inflationary force of space drives the behavior of solids, gases, liquids, and plasma in our Universe, and telling ourselves that there must be invisible matter driving their behavior is magical thinking. The answer lies in understanding the force of space and how it works throughout our Universe.
@Animesh07093 ай бұрын
Nice my mind is 😵
@tiongenyirenda6682 жыл бұрын
I feel that, talking about dark matter and Scientists saying it exists but dont completely know what it is and still haven't found an explanation for it but they do think that it exists. All this just resembles a common question that almost every person has asked them selves "Does God exist?" . We can all feel that God exists and there's a lot of evidence that explain that God exists but most people just ignore that feeling because they feel there's no true way to prove that He exists. There are People that actually believe he exists but find it hard to explain his existence but they do have a gut feeling he exists. These two subjects are completely different but you can compare the similarities.
@BrickleYourFrickle2 жыл бұрын
They aren't really comparable. Dark matter is an unknown concept. God is an *unknowable* concept. It's entirely possible within our understanding of science that we could one day observe and experiment with dark matter, it's just really difficult, and we've been unsuccessful so far. We know this because we have measurable boundaries for what dark matter could be, and a reason to suggest that our data isn't wrong and there is a measurable phenomenon happening. One day we could find a way to observe things withing these criteria, we could theoretically find dark matter. With God, *all you have* are feelings to go off of. God is a nebulous concept as-is. Even the people who believe in God can't agree which God it is, or what he is. It's safe to assume that even if God exists, we can't really consider him in the field of science, because God is unstudyable by nature of what God is. Which is someone or something who is *beyond* the rules of nature. You can't measure by the rules of nature, if that thing is not part of nature. And if God is indeed part of nature, why has no evidence whatsoever surfaced yet? Well, maybe he's real we just haven't found him yet, right? Well, there's a logical fallacy in that. A hunch isn't enough to go on to develop a theory, so until some kind of repeatable, measurable, experimentable evidence surfaces of God's existence, we can't consider him as real.
@angelocotas2592 Жыл бұрын
what if dark matter exist in a different dimension so even if we all know it exist even in our very own room, it can't interact with other matters because it is on a higher or different dimension plane?
@angelaperschau64382 жыл бұрын
“we just haven’t seen any yet!!” What do you meannnnn you just said it was everywhere!!! So waiting a really long time for the flash of heat to be detected doesn’t make any sense, because dark matter should be EVERYWHERE (according to what you’re saying)
@ibringthelastwords1358 Жыл бұрын
I wish he is my Professor back then in highschool :)
@terrificm65692 жыл бұрын
We can't see because it doesn't interact with light but the particles of gravity called gravitons.. see gravitons and you one step closer to seeing dark matter. Thank you
@sccp1997 Жыл бұрын
Perhaps, if you account that Matter and Antimatter werent the only ones in the beginning of the universe, you may know why it wasnt annihilated. In the beginning there was 5 types of matter: 1. Very Heavy-Matter ( Interacts with Strong Force / Magnetism ) / 50% 2. Heavy-Matter ( Interacts with Weak Force / Gravity ) / 30 % 3. Common Matter ( Projects Magnetism / Gravity ) / 20 % 4. Very-Light Matter ( Dont interact with Matter/Antimatter ) 5. Antimatter ( Rarely interact with Matter, due to Heavy Matter forces, and does not have forces property. ) You know that you cannot destroy matter, so you are missing that when an Anti-Particle hits its Particle, It unleashes energy which decays to Very-Heavy Matter / Dark Matter. This can be proved with the expansion of the universe itself.
@gaminsilent10202 жыл бұрын
What if dark matter was simply a manifestation of ''time''. So everything that can possibly move matter will have dark matter around. Which explain there presence around galaxy, is lack of interaction with mater and light, our impossibility to measure it... Maybe physicist just looking too far and forget the ''time'' in space-time.
@etherealradar2 жыл бұрын
You are not far off
@4or8712 жыл бұрын
Combine: 1. cosmological constant 2. schrodinger solution 3. Planck E= h f= h n 4. n = number of superpositions And you get dark matter n^2 h^2 / ( 8 m L^2) = h n m = 0.3313 10^18 10^-34 = 0.3313 10^-16 kg ( all superpositions). 1 particle = 0.331 10^-16 / ( 0.4 10^18) = 0.828 10^-34 kg = 46 eV
@4or8712 жыл бұрын
If you count only the positive wave function amplitudes: n = 10^9 then dark matter = WIMP m = 46 GeV
@4or8712 жыл бұрын
Combine: 1. cosmological constant in Dx = lp^2/λ = lp^2 n. Then n = ( 10^-52 / 10^ 70) = 10^18 2. schrodinger solution 3. Planck E= h f= h n 4. n = number of superpositions per m^2 And you get dark matter = WIMP n^2 h^2 / ( 8 m L^2) = h n m = 0.3313 10^18 10^-34 = 0.3313 10^-16 kg ( all superpositions). 1 particle = 0.331 10^-16 / ( 0.4 10^18) = 0.828 10^-34 kg = 46 eV If you count only the positive wave function amplitudes: n = 10^9 then dark matter = WIMP m = 46 GeV
@MacNif Жыл бұрын
Maybe Dark Matter is simply The Void (vaacum) of Space where there is no pressure at absolute 0. Any takers?
@JungleJargon Жыл бұрын
*Speaking of thought experiments,* The speed of light is merely a mathematical construct. In reality gravity drops off exponentially outside of a galaxy allowing for time to speed up and the other thing that happens, which people seem to forget, is that less gravity also allows for distance to be expanded, which results in less distance compared to our contracted distance inside of a galaxy. So less gravity allows for our observation of the light to travel 186,000 miles at a faster rate of time over an inflated measure of distance relative to where we are inside of the galaxy causing the speed of light to be greatly increased relative to where we are in a more contracted measure of distance and a slower rate of time if GR is true and GR is now more of an observation than a theory. No dark matter and no dark energy required.