Fed
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we all know of positive / negative mass, could the theorized "Dark Matter" actually be "Neutral" Mass?
just a thought:)
just a thought:)
The discussion revolves around the nature of dark matter, specifically the idea of it being "neutral mass" and its implications for gravitational interactions and cosmic expansion. Participants explore various hypotheses regarding the properties of dark matter, including its charge and interaction with normal matter, as well as potential candidates for dark matter.
Participants express a range of views on the nature of dark matter, with no consensus reached on the concept of "neutral mass" or the specific properties and candidates for dark matter. Disagreements exist regarding the implications of dark matter's interactions and the definitions of related terms.
Some discussions involve speculative ideas that may not align with established scientific reasoning, and participants note that certain concepts may not be appropriate for this forum's focus.
This discussion may be of interest to those exploring theoretical physics, cosmology, and the properties of dark matter, as well as individuals curious about the ongoing debates in these areas.
I have no idea what is meant by "negative mass".Fed said:we all know of positive / negative mass
There is nothing which does not interact with the gravitational field.SimonRoberts said:Surely 'neutral mass' by definition means massless. i.e, not interacting with the gravitational field.
Don't confuse dark matter with dark energy. And even w/o dark energy there are well-known cosmological solutions which do not collaps in a big crunch singularity. And btw. the collaps is not to be confused with a black hole. The later one exists within spacetime whereas the universe is spacetimeFed said:... that they/we believe dark matter to be part the reason the universe has and will forever continue to expand rather than collapse into a black hole
DE acts like a "negative gravitation force", but is does not "repel" normal matter. And as I said before - DE and DM are totally different concepts.Fed said:this would mean DM repels normal matter.
tom.stoer said:There is nothing which does not interact with the gravitational field.
SimonRoberts said:As I understand it, one piece of evidence for dark matter is the rotation rate of a galaxy as a function of distance from the centre. After a certain point, whereas the rate would be expected to fall of with radius, it stays the same. Or at least, it doesn't fall off as much as it would. This indicates the presence of what we call 'dark matter'. However, as I understand it, if present, it is evenly distributed outwards with radius. Quite how the neutrino explanation would fit with this requirement I am not sure.
Exactly. In addition the DM hypothesis is supported by gravitational lensing and other astrophysical observations.SimonRoberts said:As I understand it, one piece of evidence for dark matter is the rotation rate of a galaxy as a function of distance from the centre. After a certain point, whereas the rate would be expected to fall of with radius, it stays the same. Or at least, it doesn't fall off as much as it would. This indicates the presence of what we call 'dark matter'. However, as I understand it, if present, it is evenly distributed outwards with radius. Quite how the neutrino explanation would fit with this requirement I am not sure.
Neutrinos are no reasonable candidates for DM as they are too light; they will not come into thermal equilibrium with normal matter = they will stay too hot. Candidates are light SUSY particles, probably neutralinos. LHC will tell if there is something like that ...sanman said:Well, if neutrinos have rest mass, then as they travel outward from a galaxy they are going to be decelerated gradually by that gravitational pull, leaving only their tangential velocity components. So they will orbit their galaxy, providing uniform distribution wrt radius.