Does the holographic principle remove the need for dark matter

AI Thread Summary
The holographic principle is described as a mathematical equivalence rather than a theory, suggesting that laws of physics in higher dimensions can correspond to those in lower dimensions. This equivalence implies that both descriptions are equally valid and do not invalidate our understanding of three-dimensional space. Consequently, the holographic principle does not provide a basis for eliminating the need for dark matter. The discussion emphasizes that while the holographic principle offers a different perspective, it does not impact the existence of dark matter. Overall, the relationship between the holographic principle and dark matter remains unsubstantiated.
Lino
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I appreciate that the holographic principle is just a theory, but if I accept it and the related aspects of string theory, does it do away with the need for dark matter (since I think that the mass approaches infinity as one changes the reference frame in which one observes the the mass)?

(I'm asking this based on my reading of Susskind: The Blackhole War, and specifically the analogy of Alices' Airoplane.)

Regards,

Noel.
 
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Lino said:
I appreciate that the holographic principle is just a theory, but if I accept it and the related aspects of string theory, does it do away with the need for dark matter (since I think that the mass approaches infinity as one changes the reference frame in which one observes the the mass)?

(I'm asking this based on my reading of Susskind: The Blackhole War, and specifically the analogy of Alices' Airoplane.)

Regards,

Noel.
The holographic principle isn't really a theory. It's a mathematical equivalence: it's a statement that the exact same laws of physics in some number of dimensions are exactly equivalent to a different set of laws of physics in one less dimension. This only works with certain, specific laws of physics.

Because it is an equivalence, one description is equally as real as the other. If it turns out that the laws of physics that describe our own space-time can be reduced to a different set of laws on a surface, then that in no way means that our own understanding of our world as a three-dimensional world (four including time) is invalid: it just say it's one way of looking at things, though there are others.

So no, there's really no way that holography can say much of anything about the existence (or not) of dark matter.
 
Thanks Chalnoth.

Regards,

Noel.
 
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
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