Swimfit
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Ok this may be another stupid Question that I always seem to ask! Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy? E=MC^2 or E=MC2?
The discussion revolves around the nature of dark energy and its relationship to energy as described by the equation E=mc². Participants explore whether dark energy follows the same rules as conventional energy, its effects on the universe's expansion, and the underlying mechanisms that may govern it.
Participants express a range of views regarding the nature of dark energy, its effects, and its relationship to mass and energy. There is no consensus on whether dark energy follows the same rules as conventional energy or on its fundamental properties.
Some claims rely on assumptions about the nature of dark energy and its effects, and there are unresolved questions regarding its empirical evidence and theoretical underpinnings.
Swimfit said:Ok this may be another stupid Question that I always seem to ask! Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy? E=MC^2 or E=MC2?
Swimfit said:Thanks so much for your answer! Dark energy is a mysterious thing. From what I've read it seems to be growing stronger too.
f '(x) said:Does dark energy actually exist or is it a theory? Any proof/evidence of it?
In bound systems such as galaxies and even galactic clusters, there IS no effect of dark energy. It's like an ant pushing on a house. It's not that the ant isn't producing a force, it's that the force is so insignificant that it has no effect on what it is being applied to because there are other forces involved that swamp it.Hangtime said:Am I to understand the effect of dark energy is more prominent in areas of less baryonic matter?
No, dark energy should exist independent of mass, it seems to be a property of spacetime itself.Hangtime said:Apologies of the reiteration, but is dark energy only presumed to be a force in the presence of mass or is it based on some kind of test result?
Sort of: gravity is the counter to dark energy, but it doesn't work the same way.Hangtime said:Exactly my point. The only observable counter to the effect of Dark energy is mass. Otherwise it would be quite likely that the there would be a run away expansion event. This begs the question of why this expansion effect is increasing if the mass of the universe hasn't changed (reduced)...This maybe a subject for another thread.
dark energy is a manifestation of a constant of integration in Einstein's Field Equations.