On Sunday, 13 February 2022 at 06:46:04 UTC, Jan Panteltje wrote:
Distant galaxies and the true nature of dark matter ? https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/02/220211102628.htm
Somehow makes sense to me:
quote:
study suggests the existence of a direct interaction between the elementary particles that make up the dark matter halo
and those that make up ordinary matter.
end quote
They are still trying to make up a fix to a mistake Newton made.
Fact is: You can’t model galaxy rotation curves correctly with Newton’s inverse
squared. For instance...
Look at any detailed analysis of JWST circular orbit around its Lagrange point. Why circular? Because even NASA admits that the Sun, the moon and the earth
all affect Webb’s location and orbital path around the sun at that Lagrange point.
Not just all the mass of all three put at the center of the sun for convenience.
And yet this lesson nasa has learnt is still ignored by dark matter proponents. They ignore the real world lessons NASA has made sending up satellites to Lagrange points and keeping them there. NASA realises that gravitational
pull comes from many directions. Not just the center of the sun.
So,..Why do dark matter theorists still pretend billions of stars outside, inside,
and beside a stars orbital path do not affect its orbital speed and path?
Why? They can’t admit Newton’s inverse square doesn’t work for
galaxies rotation speeds. The mass is spread out across the disc.
Not located at its theoretical center.
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