Bill Thomson, Harold Jeffreys and Dark Stuff

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In summary, Bill Thomson and Harold Jeffreys were two prominent scientists who made significant contributions to the study of dark matter. Thomson, a physicist, proposed the existence of dark matter in the early 20th century, while Jeffreys, a mathematician, developed a statistical method for estimating the amount of dark matter in the universe. Their work laid the foundation for further research into understanding the mysterious substance that makes up a majority of the universe's mass. Despite their differing backgrounds, both Thomson and Jeffreys played important roles in advancing our understanding of dark matter and its role in the universe.
  • #36
Sorry if my curiosity came across wrongly marcus; I had (and have) no intention of calling anyone to account, for anything.

A bit of background: one of the things I'm quite interested in now is how best to convey what astronomy (and cosmology) as a science actually is, given that, for example, we seem to have no opportunity (in any of our lifetimes) of actually traveling to 3C 273 (say) and conducting in situ experiments.

Showing that all (astronomical) observations contain (physics) theories - there are no 'pure', theory-free observations - is (or should be) relatively easy and straight-forward. Getting acceptance of the idea of a cosmological principle is also relatively easy (though working through a particular cosmological principle may be difficult).

Then you can start on some easy rungs of a ladder - an H emission spectrum, for example, or trigonometric parallax.

But before too long you get to things that no one has ever seen in any earthly lab, nor (likely) ever will. Some, such as forbidden transitions that occur in physical conditions unattainable in our labs, likely cause few qualms; others, such as neutron stars and black holes, are steps too far for some folk.

And then there's (non-baryonic) dark matter, and 'dark energy'.

About the only thing I've found - so far - which gets good traction is a path through particle physics ... an astonishing universe opened up this last century or so, as particle accelerators reached higher and higher energies. Some of these wonders could also be seen, clearly or with difficulty, in painstaking studies of cosmic rays; some were found first in cosmic rays, some not.

But UHECRs clearly show the universe has particle accelerators which make the LHC look utterly trivial. If we look at how much 'new physics' there is in the several decades of energy between the proton's mass and the top quark (say), and compare that with the number of decades of energy between the top quark and the highest energy UHECR we've detected to date, is it so certain that there will be no 'new physics' there? And if the possibility of some 'new physics' is (grudgingly) admitted, can the possibility of 'new mass' (i.e. non-baryonic dark matter) be also admitted?
 
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  • #37
To an outsider, it's interesting to see how this thread has developed into a discussion about the nature of dark matter/energy, rather than questioning accepted wisdom about "the limitation put on baryonic density by the standard BBN of 4% critical density" -- Garth, post # 18.

It seems as if the standard BBN must be accepted as dogma, unlike other relevant aspects of theory, like the laws of gravity of Newton ("... gravity works differently to the way we think (MOND)" -- Wallace, 15) and Einstein ("one would need to do find the right way to modify GR" -- Marcus,4).

Even "modifications of the standard model of particle physics (may provide) ...candidates for dark matter"-- Parlyne, 9. Or expansion in the standard model of cosmology might be "strictly linear" and remove the dark matter problem -- Garth, 3. And, if the dark energy problem "could be resolved by a quantum physics of spacetime that explains the 73 percent, then it may also turn out to explain the 23 percent" of dark matter --- Marcus, 31.

Cosmologists certainly are free-thinkers, and yet:

the large quantities dark matter known to exist for "multiple reasons -- Garth, 10, if baryons, cannot it seems be imagined to "hide themselves as well as DM does" -- Wallace, 29 and it is only "very exteme distributions of (baryonic matter that) can amount to enough mass to account for the estimated DM in rich clusters -- Nereid, 30.

Of course the snippets I have extracted from posts may not correctly reflect the attitudes of their authors, but isn't it time to revisit carefully the wisdom that has been received from prestigious nuclear physicists, or at least talk about it with less reverence?
 
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  • #38
oldman said:
...

It seems as if the standard BBN must be accepted as dogma, unlike other relevant aspects of theory,..

I would interpret the acronym alternatively as "Big Bounce Nucleosynthesis".

I think the standard BBN story can be questioned but I don't see how it could qualitatively change the picture----could it make an order of magnitude change in the 4 percent?

In case other folks would like a simple online discussion of BBN which compares it with CMB there is this
http://astro.uchicago.edu/~tyler/omegab.html
It is a bit out of date, I believe the apparent conflict he mentions has been resolved.

It is by Prof. Craig Tyler (PhD 2002 U Chicago) who teaches physics at Fort Lewis College in Colorado. He's not eminent or authoritative, but I like his easy-to-read style with lots of pictures. If someone has a better webpage on the BBN, or finds serious fault with Tyler's please let me know.
http://faculty.fortlewis.edu/tyler%5Fc/

So oldman, Tyler seems to think that the BBN story is not Gospel but can be challenged and tinkered---there is room for some controversy about it. But so much is known about nuclear reactions and cross-sections etc that I find it hard to imagine that revision would change the estimated abundances by more than few percent. What am I missing?
 
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  • #39
If you took BBN away from the Pantheon of cosmological evidence I doubt the standard model would change much, if at all. There are independent measures of elemental abundances that are concordant with BBN (if not as accurate, in terms of constraining abundances) and as mentioned, the lack of Baryons is apparent in a plethora of observational methods.

Without BBN I think the form of the standard model would be the same. We may feel a little less certain of it, due to the absence of an additional concordant result, but the basic model I think would be the same.

We do live in interesting times for Cosmology as noted, which is fantastic.
 
  • #40
marcus said:
But so much is known about nuclear reactions and cross-sections etc that I find it hard to imagine that revision would change the estimated abundances by more than few percent. What am I missing?

First, thanks for the Tyler reference, Marcus. He writes clearly and simply, which is very helpful to someone like myself who has trouble with stuff like manifolds, fibre bundles and sheaves.

Second, I agree that it is a stretch to imagine a serious error in the BBN scenario --- it looks so simple and well-founded. I'd also be surprised if it were wrong. But:

What I find amazing, and may be what you're missing, is that the cognoscenti (such as the folk who are presently posting in Wallace's poll) seem quite prepared to consider scenarios that require considerable modifications to very serious parts of physics; stuff like GR, or sometimes even Newton's approximation to the way gravity behaves (the Mad Mond Mob!). And they often debate the nature of unobserved stuff, rather like the explorers of old who worried about sea serpents and the edge of the world.

Yet, you (and perhaps they) seem to find it "hard to imagine" that there could be any serious flaws in the BBN story.

From my outsider's perspective, it seems that the current consensus about cosmology, LCDM, is a stretch too very far. I'm surprised that those involved with it aren't busiliy turning over all the simple stones, especially the ones cemented down that look like foundation stones! They're the ones most likely to be built on sand.
 
  • #41
oldman said:
First, thanks for the Tyler reference, Marcus. He writes clearly and simply, which is very helpful to someone like myself who has trouble with stuff like manifolds, fibre bundles and sheaves.

Second, I agree that it is a stretch to imagine a serious error in the BBN scenario --- it looks so simple and well-founded. I'd also be surprised if it were wrong. But:

What I find amazing, and may be what you're missing, is that the cognoscenti (such as the folk who are presently posting in Wallace's poll) seem quite prepared to consider scenarios that require considerable modifications to very serious parts of physics; stuff like GR, or sometimes even Newton's approximation to the way gravity behaves (the Mad Mond Mob!). And they often debate the nature of unobserved stuff, rather like the explorers of old who worried about sea serpents and the edge of the world.

Yet, you (and perhaps they) seem to find it "hard to imagine" that there could be any serious flaws in the BBN story.

From my outsider's perspective, it seems that the current consensus about cosmology, LCDM, is a stretch too very far. I'm surprised that those involved with it aren't busiliy turning over all the simple stones, especially the ones cemented down that look like foundation stones! They're the ones most likely to be built on sand.
I think you'll find that 'all the simple stones' have been turned over, dozens and dozens of times ... I find it can be hard to convey just how astronishingly strong all the interconnections are, how the stones have been weighed, measured, analysed, etc sixty-six ways to Sunday, by different teams, using different methods, ...

Sure there are some anomalies and outliers - maybe a quick list would be fun! - but if you hang out with the most vociferous and most knowledgeable critics for a while, you will quickly see just how little is in their closet*.

*And no, it's not because, pace the signatories to that open letter, there is a strong bias against allocating resources to investigating alternatives, or anomalies and outliers (I'm not talking about string theory/LQG/twistors here, just observational cosmology and astrophysics).
 
  • #42
Nereid said:
...'all the simple stones' have been turned over, dozens and dozens of times ... I find it can be hard to convey just how astronishingly strong all the interconnections are, how the stones have been weighed, measured, analysed, etc sixty-six ways to Sunday, by different teams, using different methods, ...

And no, it's not because, pace the signatories to that open letter, there is a strong bias against allocating resources to investigating alternatives, or anomalies and outliers (I'm not talking about string theory/LQG/twistors here, just observational cosmology and astrophysics

You sound like a Believer, Nereid, possibly even a proselytizer! I'm afraid I'm so far "outside" that I haven't even heard of "that open letter". It sounds interestingly scandalous. I also accept that cosmology and astrophysics are far from the desert of string theory, sustained as they are by the life-giving water of observation.

But I agree with Marcus, when he said:

Marcus said:
I don't know any place in science where the unknown and currently uncomprehended is such a big fraction of the picture---so personally I wish to keep my mental options open, so to speak.

I also suspect that you put it a bit strongly when you talked of stone-turning activities above. What about the simple stone of BBN? Has it been turned over by different teams of cosmologists? Or nuclear physicists?

I also am still unclear how exactly the estimate of baryonic density obtained by analysing the WMAP results distinguishes between baryonic and "exotic" matter, both of which must help to shape the power spectrum.
 
  • #43
oldman said:
I also am still unclear how exactly the estimate of baryonic density obtained by analysing the WMAP results distinguishes between baryonic and "exotic" matter, both of which must help to shape the power spectrum.

They do but in quite different ways. Baryons are coupled to radiation in the early universe (essentially meaning that they interact, i.e. photons bounce of the ionized electrons and protons) whereas by definition dark matter is not coupled to the radiation, so does not scatter photons. The dark matter does influence the perturbation spectrum through gravity however.

To get a feel for different influence of Baryons and DM try having a look at the nice animations on Wayne Hu's site http://background.uchicago.edu/~whu/metaanim.html" .

For a more in depth look, I have recently started using an excellent CMB code that has a nice GUI frontend called 'CMBeasy'. You can get it for free at "www.cmbeasy.org"[/URL], though you need Linux or Mac OSX to run it. With this you can change parameters (such as energy densities) yourself through the GUI and see instantly (well after a few seconds of calculation at least) how that change affects the CMB spectrum.
 
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  • #44
oldman said:
You sound like a Believer, Nereid, possibly even a proselytizer! I'm afraid I'm so far "outside" that I haven't even heard of "that open letter". It sounds interestingly scandalous. I also accept that cosmology and astrophysics are far from the desert of string theory, sustained as they are by the life-giving water of observation.
So why not be prepared to wrestle with the gigabytes of high quality data pouring from the dozens of independent sources, examining such a vast expanse of the EM spectrum?

Is it that much easier to whip out a 'Believer' branding iron than to take the trouble to have a (deep) look for yourself?

Or does there lurk, in your heart, some vestige of Popperian naive falsificationism?
But I agree with Marcus, when he said:
marcus said:
I don't know any place in science where the unknown and currently uncomprehended is such a big fraction of the picture---so personally I wish to keep my mental options open, so to speak.
I also suspect that you put it a bit strongly when you talked of stone-turning activities above. What about the simple stone of BBN? Has it been turned over by different teams of cosmologists? Or nuclear physicists?
Well, one of my personal pet peeves is the conflating of dark matter with dark energy - I think the observational basis for each is quite different, in just so many ways ... yet so many seem to so blithely dump them into the same bucket.

Oh, and isn't this thread about 'Dark Stuff'? Would you be kind enough to explain how either is related to BBN?
I also am still unclear how exactly the estimate of baryonic density obtained by analysing the WMAP results distinguishes between baryonic and "exotic" matter, both of which must help to shape the power spectrum.
Wallace already answered this; I'll simply add that the CMB isn't the only thing with cosmological significance which astronomers observe.
 
  • #45
Nereid said:
So why not be prepared to wrestle with the gigabytes of high quality data pouring from the dozens of independent sources, examining such a vast expanse of the EM spectrum?

Broadband is not available in my backwater!

Is it that much easier to whip out a 'Believer' branding iron than to take the trouble to have a (deep) look for yourself?

If I've caused offence by wrongly labelling your approach to matters cosmological, Nereid, it's a pity. But you do sound quite disapproving of folk who don't accept what you tell them.

Or does there lurk, in your heart, some vestige of Popperian naive falsificationism?

Here I can strongly recommend Susan Haack's Defending Science to your attention. I'm situated, as she subtitles her book, firmly Between Scientism and Cynicism. Perhaps you're more inclined to the first of these positions. But then it takes all sorts to make a world!

Well, one of my personal pet peeves is the conflating of dark matter with dark energy - I think the observational basis for each is quite different, in just so many ways ... yet so many seem to so blithely dump them into the same bucket.

Perhaps because they are both invented constructs (see below) which share the attribute of being unobserved. But I agree that they are uneasy bedfellows.

Oh, and isn't this thread about 'Dark Stuff'? Would you be kind enough to explain how either is related to BBN?

I'm happy to oblige. This is the way I see it.

BBN sets an upper limit to the baryonic density , which is in conflict with the amount of dark matter inferred from straightforward observations, starting with those of Zwicky and then Vera Rubin (virial equilibrium of galaxy clusters, galaxy rotation curves) and continuing with the role dark matter must play in structure formation. This is why "exotic" dark matter was invented in the first place ---to resolve this conflict --- so BBN has lotsto do with dark matter.

BBN is not directly connected with dark energy, which was invented to resolve another conflict --- between the amount of dark matter for which there is sound observational evidence, such as that mentioned above, and the subsequent conclusion (WMAP) that the universe's overall geometry is very close to Euclidean.

But (I believe) that BBN, by setting cosmologists on the slippery path of convenient invention (exotic but still unobserved matter), is ultimately responsible for the later convenient invention of lots more invisible "dark stuff" (quintessence, dark energy, cosmological constant; call it what you will). Which lands cosmology in the unhappy state that Marcus described; or, as a cynic might say, a subject that is nowadays "all hat and no cattle".

I'll stay with Susan Haack's position: betwixt and between.
 
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  • #46
Wallace said:
They do but in quite different ways...

Thanks for this help, and for the URL's. My downloads are tediously slow, but I'll try the animations. I've also been slow in appreciating just how the wealth of information in the WMAP power spectrum has been teased out of the raw data. The reference Marcus supplied
...a simple online discussion of BBN which compares it with CMB is ...http://astro.uchicago.edu/~tyler/omegab.html...
also helped.

I note that in this reference Tyler says that 10 parameters are used in fitting the data. Are these parameters set by observation/theory that is part of the LCDM model; i.e. externally obtained, as it were, or are they just varied by curve fitting as in the 'CMBeasy' software that you mentioned? Or are both methods combined?
 
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