MTd2 said:
I was wondering how to rule out the hypothesis that most of dark matter is due micro - MACHOS, that is, if a considerable part of it is due to objects like those of the Oort Cloud and Kuiper belt.
The cosmic microwave background is currently the best evidence against this view. At the time the CMB was emitted, no stars, planets, or any such objects could have formed (the universe was too smooth). So this allows us to test whether or not the dark matter is made up of normal matter that we don't see rather easily, because the normal matter and dark matter behave very, very differently within the plasma that existed before the CMB was emitted.
Basically, before the CMB was emitted, our universe was so hot that the electrons and protons were separated, so that our entire universe was made up of this ionized gas, which we call a plasma. The thing about such an ionized gas is that it interacts very strongly with radiation. Contrast this with a normal gas, such as our atmosphere, that is very transparent.
What this means for normal matter is that when it is in this plasma state, and it starts to fall into a region of space that is slightly more dense than the surroundings, it tends to bounce back out. This bouncing behavior is very visible in the CMB.
Dark matter, however, which doesn't interact electromagnetically, doesn't have this property. When it starts to fall into a potential well, it feels no pressure, and so keeps falling inward. This lack of a bounce distorts the bouncing behavior of the normal matter, which means that the CMB itself provides an extremely accurate measurement of the ratio of normal matter to dark matter: normal matter makes up approximately 17% of the total matter in our universe, with an uncertainty of about 1-2%.