varsha
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pity i can't subscribe to this. do you know any other stuff that i can subscribe to freely, via e-mail?SpaceTiger said:Also, check this out:
http://www.astronomy.com/asy/default.aspx?c=a&id=3841"
It's an announcement from one of the groups I'm working with. We've found an overdensity of stars in the SDSS survey that, if real, might represent the nearest galaxy to the earth. My roommate is the first author on the paper (Juric et al.).
Garth said:Would it be noticed if further away, and if not then how many more are there out there?
varsha said:pity i can't subscribe to this. do you know any other stuff that i can subscribe to freely, via e-mail?
Yes, that was my drift. About ten years ago I heard a presentation of a paper that suggested the inter-cluster voids may in fact be not as deficient in density as they appear but filled with very low surface brightness galaxies that cannot be observed.SpaceTiger said:I don't think it would have been, mainly because a galaxy as sparse as this would have an extremely low surface brightness. Your second question is so far unanswered, but LCDM theorists are trying hard to. An abundance of such galaxies would lead to a possible resolution of the "small-scale structure problem". This arises from the fact that the standard model seems to overpredict the number of small dark matter halos in the vicinity of the Milky Way. If they were present but escaping detection, then there would no longer be a discrepancy.
Garth said:Yes, that was my drift. About ten years ago I heard a presentation of a paper that suggested the inter-cluster voids may in fact be not as deficient in density as they appear but filled with very low surface brightness galaxies that cannot be observed.
well i can... but it's a magazine isen't it? so it's not free. and i can't get it through e-mail.SpaceTiger said:I'm not subscribed either. Are you saying you can't see the article?
varsha said:well i can... but it's a magazine isen't it? so it's not free. and i can't get it through e-mail.
And that story refers to our very own SpaceTiger.Nereid said:I have no trouble accessing it.
However, you could always go to the official SDSS website (well, one of them), and you'd find a link to a story on this very topic: http://www.sdss.org/news/releases/20060109.virgooverdensity.html". From my quick skim of both, I'd say the SDSS one is the better.
Garth said:So what is the limit on DM is there in our neighbourhood?
And does this go anywhere in resolving the dispute over the Cooperstock & Lieu claim?
No - I didn't expect that you will! The question really is that if you have secondary confirmation of local DM from perturbations on the infalling stars then that would knock the nail on the Cooperstock & Lieu claim, as well indeed on the Milgrom/Bekenstein MOND hypothesis.SpaceTiger said:I can't say anything about that yet, partly cause it isn't published and partly because I don't have an answer. Here's a decent review of some of the past results:
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0203110"
I doubt we'll check our results with their model.
Garth said:No - I didn't expect that you will! The question really is that if you have secondary confirmation of local DM from perturbations on the infalling stars then that would knock the nail on the Cooperstock & Lieu claim, as well indeed on the Milgrom/Bekenstein MOND hypothesis.
The paper sets out the present enigma: The Pioneer Anomaly cannot be explained by prosaic causes, gas or radiation leakage, and seems to be a real gravitational effect. This is seen in distant Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft , but there has been no correlating effect in the orbits of the outer planets.Chronos said:This is worth a look:
http://www.arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0601055
What do the orbital motions of the outer planets of the Solar System tell us about the Pioneer anomaly?