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Is it possible that all that elusive dark matter is just ordinary
matter not being illuminated? From the many planetary systems that have formed in the galaxies, surely a large portion of the matter has been lost into the interstellar spaces by slingshot effects of the larger planets that stayed secure in the system. Could there be billions of small black holes lurking in the darkness? Could our galaxy be filled with more rogue planets and planetessimals than ones attached by gravity to stars? Related question: Supposedly when a Mars sized object struck earth and ultimately caused our moon to be formed, it also tilted our planet on its axis. What tilted the other planets on their axes? Mars is tilted nearly as much as ours, I think. And how the heck did Nepture get flipped almost 90 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic? |
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In article , 46erjoe
wrote: Is it possible that all that elusive dark matter is just ordinary matter not being illuminated? From the many planetary systems that have formed in the galaxies, surely a large portion of the matter has been lost into the interstellar spaces by slingshot effects of the larger planets that stayed secure in the system. Could there be billions of small black holes lurking in the darkness? Could our galaxy be filled with more rogue planets and planetessimals than ones attached by gravity to stars? Some may be normal matter (baryonic) but the behaviour of galaxies (such as the local group and the Great Attractor) together with the flat rotation curves of galaxies suggest it isnt' Normal matter would radiate (even in IR) and the fact is we cannot see it. Related question: Supposedly when a Mars sized object struck earth and ultimately caused our moon to be formed, it also tilted our planet on its axis. What tilted the other planets on their axes? Mars is tilted nearly as much as ours, I think. And how the heck did Nepture get flipped almost 90 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic? Possibly another impact. The early solar system was a pretty tumultous place. -- The greatest enemy of science is pseudoscience. Jaffa cakes. Sweet delicious orangey jaffa goodness, and an abject lesson why parroting information from the web will not teach you cosmology. Official emperor of sci.physics. Please pay no attention to my butt poking forward, it is expanding. Relf's Law? "Bull**** repeated to the limit of infinity asymptotically approaches the odour of roses." |
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In article , 46erjoe
wrote: Joe Whats your maths like? I ask because MIT's Open Courseware has some excellent astronomy and cosmology stuff you'd find fascinating - plus any of Brian Greene's books... -- The greatest enemy of science is pseudoscience. Jaffa cakes. Sweet delicious orangey jaffa goodness, and an abject lesson why parroting information from the web will not teach you cosmology. Official emperor of sci.physics. Please pay no attention to my butt poking forward, it is expanding. Relf's Law? "Bull**** repeated to the limit of infinity asymptotically approaches the odour of roses." |
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I've loved astronomy from childhood. Built my own 6" reflector in 1962
at age 12. Ultimately however, I became a clergyman -- still heavenly minded ;-) -- but continued an avid interest in astronomy. I read voraciously now that I am on full disability, especially in the interplay between science and religion. Just finished reading "Where Is Everybody" by Stephen Webb and "Rare Earth" by Peter Ward / Donald Brownlee, both in almost one sitting. John Polkinghorne (http://www.polkinghorne.org/ is my hero. I'll check out Green's books, but more academics is not my cup of tea right now - I'm terminally ill (aren't we all?) so I surf the web and watch the science channel to keep me informed. Thanks for your personal touch. Best regards, Joe On Sun, 18 Jun 2006 22:04:22 +0100, Phineas T Puddleduck wrotF: In article , 46erjoe wrote: Joe Whats your maths like? I ask because MIT's Open Courseware has some excellent astronomy and cosmology stuff you'd find fascinating - plus any of Brian Greene's books... |
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In article , 46erjoe
wrote: I've loved astronomy from childhood. Built my own 6" reflector in 1962 at age 12. Ultimately however, I became a clergyman -- still heavenly minded ;-) -- but continued an avid interest in astronomy. I read voraciously now that I am on full disability, especially in the interplay between science and religion. Just finished reading "Where Is Everybody" by Stephen Webb and "Rare Earth" by Peter Ward / Donald Brownlee, both in almost one sitting. John Polkinghorne (http://www.polkinghorne.org/ is my hero. I'll check out Green's books, but more academics is not my cup of tea right now - I'm terminally ill (aren't we all?) so I surf the web and watch the science channel to keep me informed. Thanks for your personal touch. Best regards, Joe No problem Joe. Its an absolute pleasure to talk civilly with like minded people, and you will be in my prayers (for what they are worth). I'm a mature student doing his Astophysics Masters in my 30's, going back to what I love most - learning. However, back to astronomy ;-) Brian Greene's books are very light on the math, and he makes a point of warning you when sections need it - and then provides a precis of it so you can skip it and still understand what is going on. Well worth it. Also you can watch the PBS televised series for the book "Elegant Universe" at PBS - http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/ You can watch it on line - its wonderfully light yet full of wonder, reminding me of when I watched Cosmos as a young kid when it first come out. I saw the world in a new way after that. As an agnostic/theist (as in I believe in some greater presence, just no organised religion holds sway over me yet) I find cosmology fascinating. A very dear friend of mine, an astronomy professor, passed on several years ago and he always joked that all he wanted from heaven was a blackboard, and the chance to ask God a few questions about some equations.... Sounds good to me, I don't presume to know the mind of God, but I'd love to see some of his rough workings out ;-) -- The greatest enemy of science is pseudoscience. Jaffa cakes. Sweet delicious orangey jaffa goodness, and an abject lesson why parroting information from the web will not teach you cosmology. Official emperor of sci.physics. Please pay no attention to my butt poking forward, it is expanding. Relf's Law? "Bull**** repeated to the limit of infinity asymptotically approaches the odour of roses." |
#6
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![]() 46erjoe wrote: Is it possible that all that elusive dark matter is just ordinary matter not being illuminated? From the many planetary systems that have formed in the galaxies, surely a large portion of the matter has been lost into the interstellar spaces by slingshot effects of the larger planets that stayed secure in the system. Could there be billions of small black holes lurking in the darkness? Could our galaxy be filled with more rogue planets and planetessimals than ones attached by gravity to stars? Sure it could. But it's not as fun for the theoretical astrophysicists to talk about as exotic particles of some kind. Doesn't sell as many books. Related question: Supposedly when a Mars sized object struck earth and ultimately caused our moon to be formed, it also tilted our planet on its axis. What tilted the other planets on their axes? Mars is tilted nearly as much as ours, I think. And how the heck did Nepture get flipped almost 90 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic? I think you mean Uranus. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/ That's a good question. Double-A |
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In article .com,
Double-A wrote: Sure it could. But it's not as fun for the theoretical astrophysicists to talk about as exotic particles of some kind. Doesn't sell as many books. There's issues with galactic rotation curves that cannot be explained easily by existing mass. Its not quite just for the books ... -- The greatest enemy of science is pseudoscience. Jaffa cakes. Sweet delicious orangey jaffa goodness, and an abject lesson why parroting information from the web will not teach you cosmology. Official emperor of sci.physics. Please pay no attention to my butt poking forward, it is expanding. Relf's Law? "Bull**** repeated to the limit of infinity asymptotically approaches the odour of roses." |
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On Tue, 20 Jun 2006 19:45:39 +0100, Phineas T Puddleduck
wrotF: In article , 46erjoe wrote: I watched the program and was impressed by how effective the producers were in bringing difficult concepts to the level of the average person. But I was not impressed by the concepts themselves. String theory has the smell of desperation about it. And, as the program itself notes, unless it is provable, it must remain philosophy rather than science. The books do a lot better job of explaining some of your questions Joe. Okay, so the strings are vibrating "strings" of energy. If true this may explain how certain kinds of matter-events can exist-occur, but it says nothing about what strings precisely are. What KIND of "energy"? How is that energy propagated? What keeps it intact within the string? What are the forces that make it be one kind of particle as opposed to another. Just pure energy, as I see it Joe. I like string theory for one reason - there is an elegance to it. The booxs explain that a lot better, but the theory (after you strip away some of the math) have a nice elegant symmetry to them. It just seems that no matter what theory is proposed, we are continually driven back to something that precedes it, ad infinitum. Eg, gravity. Okay, gravity is not a force, rather a warp in space-time. Again, what is this "warp" how is it propogated, how exactly does mass affect this warp, etc etc. The beauty of Science Joe - always one more question. Keeps us on our toes ;-) "Elegant symmetry" sounds more artsy than science unless by elegant is meant mathematically non-anomalous in which case quantum physics is anything but symmetric. Okay. I'm finished yapping about things I know little about. Time to read some of Green's books. |
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fake Double-Anus wrote:
46erjoe wrote: Is it possible that all that elusive dark matter is just ordinary matter not being illuminated? From the many planetary systems that have formed in the galaxies, surely a large portion of the matter has been lost into the interstellar spaces by slingshot effects of the larger planets that stayed secure in the system. Could there be billions of small black holes lurking in the darkness? Could our galaxy be filled with more rogue planets and planetessimals than ones attached by gravity to stars? Sure it could. But it's not as fun for the theoretical astrophysicists to talk about as exotic particles of some kind. Doesn't sell as many books. Related question: Supposedly when a Mars sized object struck earth and ultimately caused our moon to be formed, it also tilted our planet on its axis. What tilted the other planets on their axes? Mars is tilted nearly as much as ours, I think. And how the heck did Nepture get flipped almost 90 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic? I think you mean Uranus. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/ That's a good question. Double-Anus Quack! |
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On 20 Jun 2006 22:24:11 -0700, "Michael Baldwin, Bruce"
wrote: fake Double-Anus wrote: 46erjoe wrote: Is it possible that all that elusive dark matter is just ordinary matter not being illuminated? From the many planetary systems that have formed in the galaxies, surely a large portion of the matter has been lost into the interstellar spaces by slingshot effects of the larger planets that stayed secure in the system. Could there be billions of small black holes lurking in the darkness? Could our galaxy be filled with more rogue planets and planetessimals than ones attached by gravity to stars? Sure it could. But it's not as fun for the theoretical astrophysicists to talk about as exotic particles of some kind. Doesn't sell as many books. Related question: Supposedly when a Mars sized object struck earth and ultimately caused our moon to be formed, it also tilted our planet on its axis. What tilted the other planets on their axes? Mars is tilted nearly as much as ours, I think. And how the heck did Nepture get flipped almost 90 degrees to the plane of the ecliptic? I think you mean Uranus. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/ That's a good question. Double-Anus Quack! That's like water off a duck's ass, Bruce. |
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