thechosenone
- 5
- 0
the title pretty much says it all. i am just wondering if dark matter (which doesn't interact with light i believe) gets eaten by black holes, or is unaffected by them.
The discussion centers on the interaction between black holes and dark matter and dark energy. Participants explore whether dark matter can be consumed by black holes and the implications of dark energy's properties on such interactions.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the interactions between black holes and dark matter or dark energy. Multiple competing views remain, particularly regarding the roles and behaviors of dark matter and dark energy in relation to black holes.
There are limitations in the understanding of dark matter and dark energy, including their definitions and properties, which remain unresolved. The discussion reflects a range of hypotheses and interpretations without definitive conclusions.
thechosenone said:hold up, what do you mean by dark energy acts like negative gravity? like dark energy is repelled by large masses?
Chronos said:I view it highly likely that galactic core SMB's originated almost entirely from dark matter.
It would be wrong, for example, if DE is nothing more than the cosmological constant (\omega = -1).Wallace said:According to current understanding the ratio of dark to ordinary matter is the same for the entire history of the universe, back until the very first moments where we really don't have a clue anyway. Of course we really have no clue what DM is anyway so that could be wrong.
Point taken! The general thread was discussing DM and DE, and as you said, I got confused as to which one we were talking about here.Wallace said:You're confusing your darks Garth! We were discussing dark vs baryonic matter not dark energy. Dark and baryonic matter densities both drop with the inverse of the volume of the universe, hence their ratio's remain the same.
