Topic: Dark-matter basketballs could explain a lot  (Read 1403 times)

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Offline Stormbringer

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Dark-matter basketballs could explain a lot
« on: September 20, 2005, 03:11:40 pm »
Dark-matter basketballs could explain a lot
20 September 2005
From New Scientist Print Edition
Marcus Chown
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 THE universe's invisible matter may not be made of exotic unknown particles after all. Instead, "dark" matter could be clumps of the ordinary stuff trapped in a previously unsuspected state of the vacuum of space.

The dark-matter balls envisaged by Colin Froggatt of the University of Glasgow, UK, and Holger Nielsen of the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Denmark, are relics of a vacuum state which theory suggests could have been widespread in the first second after the big bang (www.arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0508513). Each ball would not be much bigger than a basketball and atomic nuclei would have formed inside them just as they do everywhere else in the universe, only bound by a stronger nuclear force. The balls would be much denser than ordinary matter, with each one weighing 100 million tonnes.

To account for the known density of dark matter in the cosmos, there would have to be just one such ball drifting through every volume of space about the size of our solar system.

The new theory makes one important prediction - that there should be five times as much dark matter as ordinary matter. "That's exactly what is observed," says Froggatt.

Ben Allanach of CERN, the European centre for particle physics near Geneva, Switzerland, admits the idea is wildly speculative. "But I can't think of anything specifically to rule it out," he says.

From issue 2517 of New Scientist magazine, 20 September 2005, page 10

Offline Bonk

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Re: Dark-matter basketballs could explain a lot
« Reply #1 on: September 20, 2005, 03:29:20 pm »
I have serious problems with the supposed need for the existence of "dark matter". As i understand it, it supposedly must exist to explain the observed expansion of the universe. I'm not convinced that the universe is expanding, I have little to no faith in astronomy after taking a third year physics course in astronomy. This looks like another theory based on a theory based on assumptions to me. I am concerned that this kind of thing will corrupt the purity of science and the integrity of funding for real science.

(I know all about the observed red-shifts, but find the accepted explanation small-minded.)

Offline Stormbringer

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Re: Dark-matter basketballs could explain a lot
« Reply #2 on: September 20, 2005, 03:32:46 pm »
I have serious problems with the supposed need for the existence of "dark matter". As i understand it, it supposedly must exist to explain the observed expansion of the universe. I'm not convinced that the universe is expanding, I have little to no faith in astronomy after taking a third year physics course in astronomy. This looks like another theory based on a theory based on assumptions to me. I am concerned that this kind of thing will corrupt the purity of science and the integrity of funding for real science.

(I know all about the observed red-shifts, but find the accepted explanation small-minded.)
To be sure there are alternate explainations but they are largely untestable. Still; can you imagine a hull made out of dark steel?