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Old March 6th 06, 11:49 PM posted to sci.astro.research
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Default Lensing as a test for no CDM models

Thus spake Charles Francis
The teleconnection model predicts geodesic motion for a classical ray
of light so that there is no change in the prediction of bending of
light around a body of known mass, such as the sun. Lensing is affected
in two ways: in the absence of a CDM halo, lower galactic masses will
lessen lensing but this is offset by the increase in distance to a lens
at high redshift.


It can be helpful to write a post as it focuses the mind on a subtle
problem, even if no one can answer. I have realised this is not a
complete analysis. In the teleconnection theory bending of light around
the sun is unchanged, but we are gravitational bound to the sun and
there are direct means to measure the radius of our orbit. For a lens
the only information we have comes to us from incoming light, and we
have to use weird quantum coordinates in the teleconnection model. In
these coordinates angular sizes are doubled - not for objects measured
on line of sight, but the bending of light will be doubled. The lens
will therefore be much more powerful than my previous naive analysis,
and much more powerful than in other no CDM theories. Given that Zhao
was unable to totally eliminate Bekenstein's mond, it seems highly
improbable that the teleconnection would be eliminated, though of course
detailed analysis of each lens is required.

It remains that the mass distribution of the CDM halo as calculated from
lensing follows the shape of the galaxy, which is inconsistent with that
required to produce galactic rotation curves, but trivially consistent
with a theory in which there is no CDM halo.


Regards

--
Charles Francis
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