Dark Matter is baryonic matter passed through a black hole?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the idea of dark matter being baryonic matter that has passed through a black hole. Participants argue that this concept lacks scientific validity and is not supported by mainstream cosmology or the Standard Model. The suggestion that galaxies without black holes are small due to this theory is also dismissed. Overall, the thread concludes that the proposed idea does not align with established scientific understanding. The conversation emphasizes the importance of grounding theories in accepted scientific principles.
Silenus
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Wouldn't this explain why galaxies with no black holes are so small?
 
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From what I've learned, the black hole doesn't lose mass, that which it captures it keeps, i.e. nothing is "passed through".
 
Silenus said:
Dark Matter is baryonic matter passed through a black hole?
No, that doesn't even make sense. You would do well to read some basic cosmology plus study the Standard Model.
 
Silenus said:
Wouldn't this explain why galaxies with no black holes are so small?

No, and since this concept isn't found anywhere in mainstream science as far as I know, thread locked.
 
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