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Galaxies without dark matter halos?



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 11th 03, 07:06 PM
greywolf42
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Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?


Jeffery wrote in message
...

This post has been redirected from sci.physics.research and
sci.astro.research, because the 'moderator' will not allow me to reply
there. (More on that funny aside, later.) My replies were originally
submitted on the 8th.

If you deny the Big Bang, how do explain the redhift of the galaxies?


Two of the easy ways are recessional velocity (sans big-bang) from a
matter-antimatter energy release (breakdown of Leidenfrost layers); and
dynamic resistance in the aether superfluid. The latter predicted the
non-linearity of the Hubble constant that big-bangers now use to postulate a
new epicycle called 'dark energy.'

How do explain the CMB?


Emission from electrons interacting with the aether.

How do you explain the isotropy of the CMB to 1 part in 10^5?


Emission from electrons interacting with the aether.

The evidence for the Big Bang is beyond overwhelming.


There is no significant evidence remaining for the big bang. There are
about a dozen separate ad hoc epicycles now hanging from that structure.
Each required the postulation of a 'new' physics that had no foundation or
evidence except that it allowed the 'big bang' model to escape from yet
another physical disproof.

A separate question is whether the Universe existed for an infinite
length of time. Within the inflationary model, you could have eternal
inflation. So the irony is that inflation, which saved the Big Bang
model, could ultimately allow the possibility that the Universe could
have existed for an infinite length of time after all.


Since your speculation is based on one of the ad hoc epicycles invented
solely to save the big bang model -- which I personally tossed in the
wastebin over 10 years ago -- I have no comment on your speculation.

greywolf42
ubi dubium ibi libertas



  #2  
Old August 11th 03, 07:18 PM
greywolf42
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Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?

Joseph Lazio wrote in message ...

This post has been redirected from sci.physics.research and
sci.astro.research, because the 'moderator' will not allow me to reply
there. (More on that funny aside, later.) My replies were originally
submitted on the 1st.

"TS" == Thomas Smid writes:


TS It has never been the case that all galaxies show evidence for
TS dark matter halos (...).

While true, I think it is still the case that the number of galaxies
requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves vastly
outnumbers those that do not.


The fact of existence of a significant number of galaxies without dark
matter halos (even if a nominal minority) would add another layer of 'ad
hoc' to the dark matter 'ad hoc' postulate. For there is no reason to
believe that dark matter should "avoid" some galaxies while "swarming"
others. Hence, we must 'ad hoc' allocate dark matter to those galaxies that
'need' it, and 'ad hoc' remove dark matter from those that don't.

There is no way to 'disprove' the 'dark matter' postulate if you get to add
it when you need it, and remove it when you don't. It becomes a classic
'non-refutable' proposition. Hence, not scientific.

TS The point is that the observed anomalous rotation curves of
TS galaxies are practically always based on gas velocities which can
TS be very different from the velocities of stars (...).

It would be interesting to see some evidence to back this up.


The 'evidence' both trivial and well-known. Gas velocities are affected by
electric and magnetic fields quite easily. Stars are not. Galactic
electric and magnetic fields are not only known and measured. The spiral
rotation curves match the EM-predicted curves. No dark matter needed.

What is odd is that there is so much investment in the 'popular' assumption
that stars are just like gas, and that galactic motions are driven solely by
gravity.

In the
outer reaches of galaxies, rotation curves are based on gas velocities
because there are no (or so few) stars from which to obtain stellar
velocities. However, I think it is the case that within the optical
disk, gas and stellar velocities match fairly well.


You have no basis for this claim. There is not a single paper (to my
knowledge) for galactic rotation curves that does not depend on gas
velocities or O and B stars. The O and B stars by necessity retain the
initial velocities of the gas clouds which created them (as they are too
young to deviate significantly from same).

Moreover, as a counter-argument I'll point out the case of the
Galactic center (i.e., center of the Milky Way Galaxy). For many
years, people measured gas velocities that seemed to indicate a large
dark mass (i.e., a supermassive black hole). A key uncertainty was
whether the gas velocities were being affected by non-gravitational
forces. There is no shortage of non-gravitational forces in the
Galactic center, either, strong magnetic fields, stellar winds, etc.

When stellar velocities became available, they matched the gas
velocities.


Reference, please. I think you'll find that there are either NO stars or O
and B stars.

I'd be happy to be disproved. I've been asking for any paper to the
contrary for years.

greywolf42
ubi dubium ibi libertas
  #3  
Old August 12th 03, 12:36 PM
Joseph Lazio
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Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?

"g" == greywolf42 writes:

g Joseph Lazio wrote in message
g ...

"TS" == Thomas Smid writes:


TS It has never been the case that all galaxies show evidence for
TS dark matter halos (...).

While true, I think it is still the case that the number of
galaxies requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves
vastly outnumbers those that do not.


g The fact of existence of a significant number of galaxies without
g dark matter halos (...) would add another layer of 'ad hoc' to the
g dark matter 'ad hoc' postulate.

It would be nice to have some numbers associated with this. One might
expect a few "exceptions to prove the rule." I'm not aware that a
"significant" number of galaxies do not require a dark halo to explain
their rotation curve. References? You may also wish to review the
discussion between Thomas Smid and myself. Smid pointed to the work
of Vega-Beltran. I then commented that much of Vega-Beltran's work
concerns comparisons between stellar and *ionized* gas motions. He
shows reasonable agreement between the two, at least in the outer
portions of galaxies, where a dark halo requirement is most
stringent. Moreover, one would think that ionized gas would be more
likely to be affected by magnetic fields than neutral gas.


In the outer reaches of galaxies, rotation curves are based on gas
velocities because there are no (or so few) stars from which to
obtain stellar velocities. However, I think it is the case that
within the optical disk, gas and stellar velocities match fairly
well.


g You have no basis for this claim. There is not a single paper
g (...) for galactic rotation curves that does not depend on gas
g velocities or O and B stars. The O and B stars by necessity retain
g the initial velocities of the gas clouds which created them (...).

Admittedly, this is not my area, but I'm astounded. Nobody's ever
attempted to measure the stellar velocity dispersion of a spiral disk?
This is done all the time for bulges and elliptical galaxies. Are
spiral disks really that faint that nobody's tried it even with nearby
galaxies?

Moreover, as a counter-argument I'll point out the case of the
Galactic center (i.e., center of the Milky Way Galaxy). For many
years, people measured gas velocities that seemed to indicate a
large dark mass (i.e., a supermassive black hole). A key
uncertainty was whether the gas velocities were being affected by
non-gravitational forces. There is no shortage of
non-gravitational forces in the Galactic center, either, strong
magnetic fields, stellar winds, etc.

When stellar velocities became available, they matched the gas
velocities.


g Reference, please. I think you'll find that there are either NO
g stars or O and B stars.

g I'd be happy to be disproved. I've been asking for any paper to
g the contrary for years.

Where to start? There's a huge literature on the Galactic center.

I suggest looking at the ADS. Authors to search on include
K. Sellgren, R. Genzel, A. Ghez, J. Zhao, and P. Ho. The last two
have been more involved in determining the gas motions, while the
first three have been more involved in determining stellar motions.

A good place to start might be Genzel et al. (1997, URL:
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/np...NRAS.291..219G )
as they show a plot of the mass distribution in the Galactic center as
inferred from both stellar and gas motions (Figure 8). They also have
a summary of a number of observations in Section 1. Also note that
much of the stellar work they summarize or reference concerns
late-type stars.

--
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  #4  
Old August 12th 03, 05:44 PM
greywolf42
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Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?


Joseph Lazio wrote in message
...
"g" == greywolf42 writes:


g Joseph Lazio wrote in message
g ...

"TS" == Thomas Smid writes:

TS It has never been the case that all galaxies show evidence for
TS dark matter halos (...).

While true, I think it is still the case that the number of
galaxies requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves
vastly outnumbers those that do not.


g The fact of existence of a significant number of galaxies without
g dark matter halos (...) would add another layer of 'ad hoc' to the
g dark matter 'ad hoc' postulate.

It would be nice to have some numbers associated with this. One might
expect a few "exceptions to prove the rule."


?? Exceptions *never* prove the rule. Especially in science, one exception
disproves the rule.

The point is simple. You can't have a valid scientific theory that allows
you to arbitrarily add and remove 'dark matter' from galaxies as needed --
just to match observation and 'save' a theory. Such an approach is not
disprovable.

I'm not aware that a
"significant" number of galaxies do not require a dark halo to explain
their rotation curve. References?


Vega-Beltran is the most recent. However, your claim is ".. the number of
galaxies requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves vastly
outnumbers those that do not." What would you 'a priori' consider a
'significant' number of galaxies?

You may also wish to review the
discussion between Thomas Smid and myself. Smid pointed to the work
of Vega-Beltran. I then commented that much of Vega-Beltran's work
concerns comparisons between stellar and *ionized* gas motions. He
shows reasonable agreement between the two, at least in the outer
portions of galaxies, where a dark halo requirement is most
stringent.


I disagree with your characterization of your discussion with Smid. It's
true that you made several similar assertions. But those assertions were
not backed up by Smid -- or by the work of Vega-Beltran.

Moreover, one would think that ionized gas would be more
likely to be affected by magnetic fields than neutral gas.


Neutral gas is affected by magnetic fields in the same manner as ionized
gas. It just accelerates more slowly. Gas may be paramagnetic or
diamagnetic. Gas has a magnetic moment. The neutral gas will not
accelerate as fast as ionized gas will -- but it will reach the same final
velocities relative to the magnetic field.


In the outer reaches of galaxies, rotation curves are based on gas
velocities because there are no (or so few) stars from which to
obtain stellar velocities. However, I think it is the case that
within the optical disk, gas and stellar velocities match fairly
well.


g You have no basis for this claim. There is not a single paper
g (...) for galactic rotation curves that does not depend on gas
g velocities or O and B stars. The O and B stars by necessity retain
g the initial velocities of the gas clouds which created them (...).

Admittedly, this is not my area, but I'm astounded. Nobody's ever
attempted to measure the stellar velocity dispersion of a spiral disk?


That's a pretty silly strawman. Of course people have attempted to measure
stellar velocity distribution. But it's very difficult (time consuming) to
do this on a star-by-star basis. (Think about how many stars there are in a
galaxy.)

This is done all the time for bulges and elliptical galaxies.


Those use GAS when they can get it. It's only when gas is not available
that one resorts to counting individual stars.

Are
spiral disks really that faint that nobody's tried it even with nearby
galaxies?


*Read* my statement. They use the very luminous 'O' and 'B' stars when they
count. There aren't as many, and they are easy to pick out. Individual
stars dimmer than 'B' are difficult to pick out of the background star fog
in even nearby galaxies.

Moreover, as a counter-argument I'll point out the case of the
Galactic center (i.e., center of the Milky Way Galaxy). For many
years, people measured gas velocities that seemed to indicate a
large dark mass (i.e., a supermassive black hole). A key
uncertainty was whether the gas velocities were being affected by
non-gravitational forces. There is no shortage of
non-gravitational forces in the Galactic center, either, strong
magnetic fields, stellar winds, etc.

When stellar velocities became available, they matched the gas
velocities.


g Reference, please. I think you'll find that there are either NO
g stars or O and B stars.

g I'd be happy to be disproved. I've been asking for any paper to
g the contrary for years.

Where to start? There's a huge literature on the Galactic center.

I suggest looking at the ADS. Authors to search on include
K. Sellgren, R. Genzel, A. Ghez, J. Zhao, and P. Ho. The last two
have been more involved in determining the gas motions, while the
first three have been more involved in determining stellar motions.


I'm not asking for general stratgies, but for specific references. I've
done the usual searches. The point is, I believe that there aren't any
stellar motion studies that don't either measure gas motions alone, or
measure gas plus a few O and B stars.

A good place to start might be Genzel et al. (1997, URL:

http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/np...NRAS.291..219G
)
as they show a plot of the mass distribution in the Galactic center as
inferred from both stellar and gas motions (Figure 8). They also have
a summary of a number of observations in Section 1. Also note that
much of the stellar work they summarize or reference concerns
late-type stars.


You're going to have to start reading abstracts a bit better (or perhaps you
missed the fact that 'likely' early-type stars of 15-20 solar masses are 'O'
and 'B' stars). Here is the abstract (the paper itself is not available on
the website, but doesn't appear to be needed in this case):

"We discuss constraints on the properties and nature of the dark mass
concentration at the core of the Milky Way. We present 0.15-arcsec
astrometric K-band maps in five epochs beween 1992 and 1996. From these we
derive imposed stellar proper motions within 3 arcsec of the compact radio
source SgrA* whose infrared counterpart may have been detected, for the
first time, in a deep image in 1996 June. We also report
lambda/Deltalambda~35 speckle spectroscopy and show that several of the
SgrA* (infrared) cluster members are likely early-type stars of mass ~15 to
20 Msolar. All available checks, including a first comparison with
high-resolution maps that are now becoming available from other groups,
support our previous conclusion that there are several fast-moving stars
(=10^3 km s^-1) in the immediate vicinity (0.01 pc) of SgrA*. From the
stellar radial and proper motion data, we infer that a dark mass of 2.61
(+/-0.15_stat)(+/-0.35_stat+sys)x10^6 Msolar must reside within about one
light-week of the compact radio source. Its density must be 2.2x10^12 Msolar
pc^-3 or greater. There is no stable configuration of normal stars, stellar
remnants or substellar entities at that density. From an equipartition
argument we infer
that at least 5 per cent of the dark mass (=10^5 Msolar) is associated with
the compact radio source SgrA* itself and is concentrated on a scale of less
than 15 times the Schwarzschild radius of a 2.6x10^6-Msolar black hole. The
corresponding density is 3x10^20 Msolar pc^-3 or greater. If one accepts
these arguments it is hard to escape the conclusion that there must be a
massive black hole at the core of the Milky Way."

1) "Compact radio source SgrA" indicates a *gas* measurement.
2) They 'may' have found an infrared signature of some stars.
3) However, they can only 'infer' that these are likely early-type stars
15-20 Msolar (i.e. 'O' and 'B' type stars).
4) There are 'several' fast-moving stars in the region. (They did not say
that they are *all* moving this fast.)
5) Using *theory* they then state that "there is no stable configuration of
normal stars, stellar remnants, or substellar entities at that density."
They ignore gas in this latter statement.


So, you'll note that my basic point is very well reinforced by your own
reference. We look at gas first, then -- sometimes, with difficulty --
manage to get a few very young 'O' and 'B' (recently condensed from gas) .

I'm still waiting




  #5  
Old August 12th 03, 05:56 PM
greywolf42
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?


greywolf42 wrote in message
...


Sorry about that. Tried to delete the following started thought
(redundant), and hit 'send' instead.

I'm still waiting


greywolf42
ubi dubium ibi libertas


  #6  
Old August 13th 03, 01:26 PM
Joseph Lazio
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Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?

"g" == greywolf42 writes:

g Joseph Lazio wrote in message
g ...

TS It has never been the case that all galaxies show evidence for
TS dark matter halos (...).
While true, I think it is still the case that the number of
galaxies requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves
vastly outnumbers those that do not.


g The fact of existence of a significant number of galaxies without
g dark matter halos (...) would add another layer of 'ad hoc' to the
g dark matter 'ad hoc' postulate.

It would be nice to have some numbers associated with this. One
might expect a few "exceptions to prove the rule."


g ?? Exceptions *never* prove the rule. Especially in science, one
g exception disproves the rule.

g The point is simple. You can't have a valid scientific theory that
g allows you to arbitrarily add and remove 'dark matter' from
g galaxies as needed -- just to match observation and 'save' a
g theory. Such an approach is not disprovable.

You seem to misunderstand dark matter. The expectation that dark
matter exists is not on par with various theories, such as special
relativity or electromagnetism.

The velocities of various components of many galaxies cannot be
reproduced with our best theory of gravity if we assume that the
luminous matter represents all of the matter. Thus, we have two
choices: Either general relativity is wrong or we're not seeing
some of the matter. (I suppose one might say three choices, both
are wrong.) General relativity has been well tested, so we're
reluctant to dump it. It's easy to think that we have missed some
matter, particularly because we know of many objects that would be too
faint to be seen at the distances of other galaxies. Thus, the more
simple explanation is that dark matter exists.

However, galaxies are complicated things. Their formation probably
involves dissipation and turbulence. Moreover, they can be affected
by interactions with other galaxies. Should we expect all galaxies to
be nearly identical? No. Should they all contain the same amount or
same proportion of dark matter? No. Hence, a few exceptions
(galaxies without dark matter) may prove a rule (most galaxies have
dark matter and galaxies are complicated things). This is kind of
equivalent to trying to predict the number of planets in a solar
system. It should be simple, right? It's just gravity and
electromagnetism, both well understood forces. Yet the actual number
of planets is determined by so many aspects of planetary formation
that an actual a priori prediction is well-nigh impossible.


You may also wish to review the discussion between Thomas Smid and
myself. Smid pointed to the work of Vega-Beltran. I then
commented that much of Vega-Beltran's work concerns comparisons
between stellar and *ionized* gas motions. He shows reasonable
agreement between the two, at least in the outer portions of
galaxies, where a dark halo requirement is most stringent.


g I disagree with your characterization of your discussion with Smid.
g It's true that you made several similar assertions. But those
g assertions were not backed up by Smid -- or by the work of
g Vega-Beltran.

Umm, care to be more specific? I commented on several papers by
Vega-Beltran. Unless you can point out where I've misread his papers,
I'm going to have to chalk this up to continuing to try to prove by
assertion.


Moreover, one would think that ionized gas would be more likely to
be affected by magnetic fields than neutral gas.


g Neutral gas is affected by magnetic fields in the same manner as
g ionized gas. It just accelerates more slowly. [...]

More proof by assertion? Ionized gas should respond strongly to
magnetic fields. If ionized gas and stars have the same velocities,
why would neutral gas behave differently than ionized gas?

There's also the issue I've raised a couple of times in this newsgroup
that the energy contained in the magnetic field does not seem to be
sufficient to explain the velocities.


Admittedly, this is not my area, but I'm astounded. Nobody's ever
attempted to measure the stellar velocity dispersion of a spiral
disk?


g That's a pretty silly strawman. Of course people have attempted to
g measure stellar velocity distribution. But it's very difficult
g (...) to do this on a star-by-star basis.
[...]
This is done all the time for bulges and elliptical galaxies.


g Those use GAS when they can get it. It's only when gas is not
g available that one resorts to counting individual stars.

Nobody counts individual stars in galaxies. Resolving a galaxy into
stars is only possible for the nearest galaxies. What's measured is
the velocity dispersion from the integrated light of the stars. This
is done all the time for elliptical galaxies and the bulges of spiral
galaxies (both of which often contain *little* gas).


Moreover, as a counter-argument I'll point out the case of the
Galactic center (i.e., center of the Milky Way Galaxy). [...]
When stellar velocities became available, they matched the gas
velocities.


g Reference, please. I think you'll find that there are either NO
g stars or O and B stars. [...]

Where to start? There's a huge literature on the Galactic center.

I suggest looking at the ADS. Authors to search on include
K. Sellgren, R. Genzel, A. Ghez, J. Zhao, and P. Ho. The last two
have been more involved in determining the gas motions, while the
first three have been more involved in determining stellar motions.


g I'm not asking for general stratgies, but for specific references.
g I've done the usual searches. The point is, I believe that there
g aren't any stellar motion studies that don't either measure gas
g motions alone, or measure gas plus a few O and B stars.

That's why I referred specifically to Sellgren. She and her
collaborators have been measuring the stellar velocity dispersion from
late-type giants.

A good place to start might be Genzel et al. (1997, URL:

http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/np...NRAS.291..219G
) as they show a plot of the mass distribution in the Galactic
center as inferred from both stellar and gas motions (Figure 8).
They also have a summary of a number of observations in Section 1.
Also note that much of the stellar work they summarize or reference
concerns late-type stars.


g You're going to have to start reading abstracts a bit better (or
g perhaps you missed the fact that 'likely' early-type stars of 15-20
g solar masses are 'O' and 'B' stars). Here is the abstract (the
g paper itself is not available on the website, [...]):

The paper is indeed available on the Web site. See the links at the
top that say, "Full Refereed Journal Article" or "Full Refereed
Scanned Article."

--
Lt. Lazio, HTML police | e-mail:
No means no, stop rape. |
http://patriot.net/%7Ejlazio/
sci.astro FAQ at http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html
  #7  
Old August 13th 03, 07:10 PM
greywolf42
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?


Joseph Lazio wrote in message
...
"g" == greywolf42 writes:


g Joseph Lazio wrote in message
g ...


TS It has never been the case that all galaxies show evidence for
TS dark matter halos (...).


While true, I think it is still the case that the number of
galaxies requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves
vastly outnumbers those that do not.


g The fact of existence of a significant number of galaxies without
g dark matter halos (...) would add another layer of 'ad hoc' to the
g dark matter 'ad hoc' postulate.

It would be nice to have some numbers associated with this. One
might expect a few "exceptions to prove the rule."


g ?? Exceptions *never* prove the rule. Especially in science, one
g exception disproves the rule.

g The point is simple. You can't have a valid scientific theory that
g allows you to arbitrarily add and remove 'dark matter' from
g galaxies as needed -- just to match observation and 'save' a
g theory. Such an approach is not disprovable.

You seem to misunderstand dark matter.


The classic special plead fallacy.

The expectation that dark
matter exists is not on par with various theories, such as special
relativity or electromagnetism.


I agree that the existence of dark matter is pure ad hoc speculation.

The velocities of various components of many galaxies cannot be
reproduced with our best theory of gravity if we assume that the
luminous matter represents all of the matter.


The fallacy of the excluded middle, with only one option! The whole point
of the thread is that your *assumption* that interstellar gas moves solely
from gravitational force -- and that stars and gas move in lockstep -- is
not supported by observation.

Thus, we have two
choices: Either general relativity is wrong or we're not seeing
some of the matter. (I suppose one might say three choices, both
are wrong.) General relativity has been well tested, so we're
reluctant to dump it. It's easy to think that we have missed some
matter, particularly because we know of many objects that would be too
faint to be seen at the distances of other galaxies. Thus, the more
simple explanation is that dark matter exists.


If you start with the assumption that gas always moves likes stars, and both
are driven solely by gravity, you *do* come face-to-face with the fact that
galaxies don't match your theory. However, making an ad hoc speculation
that an 'invisible' something exists is pretty lame.

However, galaxies are complicated things. Their formation probably
involves dissipation and turbulence. Moreover, they can be affected
by interactions with other galaxies. Should we expect all galaxies to
be nearly identical? No. Should they all contain the same amount or
same proportion of dark matter? No. Hence, a few exceptions
(galaxies without dark matter) may prove a rule (most galaxies have
dark matter and galaxies are complicated things). This is kind of
equivalent to trying to predict the number of planets in a solar
system. It should be simple, right? It's just gravity and
electromagnetism, both well understood forces. Yet the actual number
of planets is determined by so many aspects of planetary formation
that an actual a priori prediction is well-nigh impossible.


What this demonstrates is your inability to even momentarily consider that
your starting assumption is wrong. The several papers here clearly identify
three things:

1) We measure gas motions, NOT star motions -- except in rare cases.
2) In those rare cases, we measure O and B stars -- that have just recently
condensed from gas.
3) Gas and stars are observed to move differently. The later the stellar
type, the more different from gas motion.

For #1, astronomers have made your pet assumption. For the other two, your
pet assumption is contradicted by observation.

{Replacing a claim made by Mr. Lazio, and a request for backup that he
wanted to avoid.}
=====================================
JL:
I'm not aware that a
"significant" number of galaxies do not require a dark halo to explain
their rotation curve. References?


greywolf42:
Vega-Beltran is the most recent. However, your claim is ".. the number of
galaxies requiring dark matter to explain their rotation curves vastly
outnumbers those that do not." What would you 'a priori' consider a
'significant' number of galaxies?
=====================================
Mr. Lazio is not willing to commit himself to what he considers a
'significant' number of galaxies. This would too easily show his claim
disproved. Hence, he deleted his spurious claim.


You may also wish to review the discussion between Thomas Smid and
myself. Smid pointed to the work of Vega-Beltran. I then
commented that much of Vega-Beltran's work concerns comparisons
between stellar and *ionized* gas motions. He shows reasonable
agreement between the two, at least in the outer portions of
galaxies, where a dark halo requirement is most stringent.


g I disagree with your characterization of your discussion with Smid.
g It's true that you made several similar assertions. But those
g assertions were not backed up by Smid -- or by the work of
g Vega-Beltran.

Umm, care to be more specific? I commented on several papers by
Vega-Beltran.


Sure. You made a vague assertion about your discussion with Smid -- to
which I replied. Because you were vague, I couldn't be more specific.
Let's start with one of Smid's statements:

TS: "(T)he observed anomalous rotation curves of galaxies are practically
always based on gas velocities which can be very different from the
velocities of stars..."

Your response was dismissal of the claim (which is true in all references in
this discussion) and pure assertion to the contrary (sans evidence):

JL: "It would be interesting to see some evidence to back this up. In the
outer reaches of galaxies, rotation curves are based on gas velocities
because there are no (or so few) stars from which to obtain stellar
velocities. However, I think it is the case that within the optical disk,
gas and stellar velocities match fairly well."

Smid was kind enough to provide specific references showing your assertion
was incorrect according to observation:

TS: "I quote from Battaner and Florido ({link}): 'important deviations from
corotation are found in about 14 out of 22
galaxies in the Vega-Beltran sample, where gas and star rotation curves were
measured independently.'"

Your response was to ignore the above statement completely. You diverted
into an earlier statement by Battaner and Florido:

JL: "The stellar disk and the gas in the disk usually corotate, but due to
frequent mergers and the accretion of clouds, captures, etc, this is not
always the case."

Which -- of course -- doesn't change the conclusions of the the B&F paper
one i-dot. Then you dived into a digression with :

JL: "Moreover, I looked up some of Vega-Beltran's papers. (The reference
cited by Battaner & Florido is the Ph.D. thesis, which is often difficult to
find online."

In short, you diverted to completely different papers than were given in
reference by B&F (and Smid)! Yet even these papers do not support your
assertions.

JL: (quoting V-B): "'In the outer regions of all of the sample of 20
galaxies the stellar rotation is comparable to
that of the ionized gas [...], while in the inner regions the following
kinematic features are noteworthy.'"

Q.E.D. Gas and stars do not generally rotate at the same speed.

Unless you can point out where I've misread his papers,
I'm going to have to chalk this up to continuing to try to prove by
assertion.


{snicker}

Moreover, one would think that ionized gas would be more likely to
be affected by magnetic fields than neutral gas.


g Neutral gas is affected by magnetic fields in the same manner as
g ionized gas. It just accelerates more slowly. [...]

More proof by assertion?


LOL! Have you ever taken a physics course? Oh -- no -- I see your slimy
innuendo is deliberte. Because you deleted the explanation of my statement.

Let's put the rest of my statement back in...
"Gas may be paramagnetic or diamagnetic. Gas has a magnetic moment. The
neutral gas will not accelerate as fast as ionized gas will -- but it will
reach the same final velocities relative to the magnetic field."

Your action was both pathetic and dishonest.

Ionized gas should respond strongly to
magnetic fields. If ionized gas and stars have the same velocities,


They don't pea-brain! That's what the references say. No matter how much
you try to ignore them.

why would neutral gas behave differently than ionized gas?


My point was that neutral gas behaves in a manner similar to ionized gas.
It just responds more slowly. But reaches the same final velocities.

There's also the issue I've raised a couple of times in this newsgroup
that the energy contained in the magnetic field does not seem to be
sufficient to explain the velocities.


Out of left field comes ... another pathetic attempt at diversion. Which
you lost several times over in those other threads. And to which I won't
bother to reply, because it is off-topic here.


{Mr. Lazio again deletes the evidence, in order to try to continue making
claims contrary to evidence.}
================================
JL:
In the outer reaches of galaxies, rotation curves are based on gas
velocities because there are no (or so few) stars from which to
obtain stellar velocities. However, I think it is the case that
within the optical disk, gas and stellar velocities match fairly
well.


greywolf42:
g You have no basis for this claim. There is not a single paper
g (...) for galactic rotation curves that does not depend on gas
g velocities or O and B stars. The O and B stars by necessity retain
g the initial velocities of the gas clouds which created them (...).

================================

Admittedly, this is not my area, but I'm astounded. Nobody's ever
attempted to measure the stellar velocity dispersion of a spiral
disk?


g That's a pretty silly strawman. Of course people have attempted to
g measure stellar velocity distribution. But it's very difficult
g (...) to do this on a star-by-star basis.
[...]


I see you can't disagree, so settled for deleting my clarifications.

This is done all the time for bulges and elliptical galaxies.


g Those use GAS when they can get it. It's only when gas is not
g available that one resorts to counting individual stars.


LOL! Mr. Lazio is really getting 'creative' in his deletions he
===========================================
JL:
Are
spiral disks really that faint that nobody's tried it even with nearby
galaxies?


*Read* my statement. They use the very luminous 'O' and 'B' stars when they
count. There aren't as many, and they are easy to pick out. Individual
stars dimmer than 'B' are difficult to pick out of the background star fog
in even nearby galaxies.
===========================================

Nobody counts individual stars in galaxies. Resolving a galaxy into
stars is only possible for the nearest galaxies.


And your point would be what? Nearby galaxies are included in the set of
all galaxies. In fact, I was dealing with your specific statement (which
you deleted).

What's measured is
the velocity dispersion from the integrated light of the stars.


Which is comprised primarily of O and B stars -- as they are several orders
of magnitude more luminous than the others.

This
is done all the time for elliptical galaxies and the bulges of spiral
galaxies (both of which often contain *little* gas).


And which don't contain the need for dark matter. It seems it's only
the gas measurements that require dark matter.


Moreover, as a counter-argument I'll point out the case of the
Galactic center (i.e., center of the Milky Way Galaxy). [...]
When stellar velocities became available, they matched the gas
velocities.


g Reference, please. I think you'll find that there are either NO
g stars or O and B stars.


[...]

Fascinating. Mr. Lazio feels the need to remove my statement:
"I'd be happy to be disproved. I've been asking for any paper to the
contrary for years."

Maybe it's because it severely weakens his case?

Where to start? There's a huge literature on the Galactic center.

I suggest looking at the ADS. Authors to search on include
K. Sellgren, R. Genzel, A. Ghez, J. Zhao, and P. Ho. The last two
have been more involved in determining the gas motions, while the
first three have been more involved in determining stellar motions.


g I'm not asking for general stratgies, but for specific references.
g I've done the usual searches. The point is, I believe that there
g aren't any stellar motion studies that don't either measure gas
g motions alone, or measure gas plus a few O and B stars.

That's why I referred specifically to Sellgren. She and her
collaborators have been measuring the stellar velocity dispersion from
late-type giants.


You didn't refer to *any* specific work by Sellegren. And why this bizarre
need to try to divert the issue to Sellgren on a subsequent post? Oh,
right, your first attempt (immediately below) showed the opposite of your
claim.

A good place to start might be Genzel et al. (1997, URL:


http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/np...NRAS.291..219G
) as they show a plot of the mass distribution in the Galactic
center as inferred from both stellar and gas motions (Figure 8).
They also have a summary of a number of observations in Section 1.
Also note that much of the stellar work they summarize or reference
concerns late-type stars.


g You're going to have to start reading abstracts a bit better (or
g perhaps you missed the fact that 'likely' early-type stars of 15-20
g solar masses are 'O' and 'B' stars). Here is the abstract [...]):


{I have no problem with Lazio deleting the abstract -- except that even the
abstract flatly disproved his claims.}

However I *do* have a problem with Mr. Lazio deleting my points
demonstrating that Lazio's own reference destroys his entire effort:
============================
1) "Compact radio source SgrA" indicates a *gas* measurement.
2) They 'may' have found an infrared signature of some stars.
3) However, they can only 'infer' that these are likely early-type stars
15-20 Msolar (i.e. 'O' and 'B' type stars).
4) There are 'several' fast-moving stars in the region. (They did not say
that they are *all* moving this fast.)
5) Using *theory* they then state that "there is no stable configuration of
normal stars, stellar remnants, or substellar entities at that density."
They ignore gas in this latter statement.

So, you'll note that my basic point is very well reinforced by your own
reference. We look at gas first, then -- sometimes, with difficulty --
manage to get a few very young 'O' and 'B' (recently condensed from gas) .
============================

g (the paper itself is not available on the website,)

The paper is indeed available on the Web site. See the links at the
top that say, "Full Refereed Journal Article" or "Full Refereed
Scanned Article."


And so I bid you adieu in this thread. I don't waste my time with
'creative' snippers. It is obvious that no amount of observational evidence
will change your view. You keep providing reference after reference that
contradicts your position. But you can't see it.

greywolf42
ubi dubium ibi libertas


  #8  
Old August 14th 03, 12:58 PM
Joseph Lazio
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?

"SW" == Steve Willner writes:

SW In article , Joseph Lazio
SW writes:

Admittedly, this is not my area, but I'm astounded. Nobody's ever
attempted to measure the stellar velocity dispersion of a spiral
disk?


SW Are we talking about velocity dispersions or rotation curves? I
SW thought the evidence for dark matter was the latter.

I would think so, too. However, a recent set of posts assert that
stellar and gas rotation curves are different. Based on the (few)
references provided, I don't agree. IIRC, the post to which I was
responding even asserted that no stellar velocities were available.
That's what prompted my statement. Although the velocities of
individual stars would be difficult to obtain, it might be possible to
measure the velocity dispersion from the integrated light of the stars
in the disk. I don't know if this has been tried, though.

--
Lt. Lazio, HTML police | e-mail:
No means no, stop rape. |
http://patriot.net/%7Ejlazio/
sci.astro FAQ at http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html
  #9  
Old August 14th 03, 06:27 PM
greywolf42
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?


Steve Willner wrote in message
...
In article ,
Joseph Lazio writes:
It would be nice to have some numbers associated with this. One might
expect a few "exceptions to prove the rule." I'm not aware that a
"significant" number of galaxies do not require a dark halo to explain
their rotation curve.


I've not been following this discussion, but doesn't the existence of
even one galaxy with a dark halo prove that dark matter exists?


The existence of a dark halo is an ad hoc speculation invoked when the
measured motion of gas in a galaxy does not match the motion predicted by
Newtonian/Einsteinian gravitation applied to the visible density of stars
(matter) in the galaxy.

Dark matter (being an ad hoc addition) cannot be invoked to explain *some*
rotation curves and ignored to explain others.

As
Joe says later, galaxy evolution is complex, so the relative numbers
of galaxies with and without haloes could be anything (though
eventually a good theory of galaxy evolution should predict the
correct value).


There is no part of the dark matter speculation that allows only *some*
galaxies to contain dark matter. Dark matter is required by all -- if it
exists at all. Dark matter doesn't 'evolve' with the galaxy. It preexists,
and -- supposedly -- drives galactic formation.

Of course in a larger sense, we know dark matter exists in many
forms. What is at issue is its amount, nature, and distribution.


In no sense whatsoever do we have any indication that 'dark matter' exists.
'Dark matter' does not mean simply normal matter that is not radiating.
'Dark matter' is -- by definition -- a 'new' kind of matter that does not
interact by EM or strong forces at all. That is purely gravitational. The
'non-radiating' 'normal matter' is already included in those galactic
dynamics and evolution theories.

Admittedly, this is not my area, but I'm astounded. Nobody's ever
attempted to measure the stellar velocity dispersion of a spiral
disk?


Are we talking about velocity dispersions or rotation curves? I
thought the evidence for dark matter was the latter.


It *is* the latter. Mr. Lazio screwed up. But it's a minor point, because
it was his search criteria that he fouled up. The essence of his argument
is that so long as even 'one' galaxy is found that 'needs' dark matter, then
dark matter is proved. Which is the reverse of the scientific method.

There is also the theoretical issue that spiral arms, as in the Milky
Way, are unstable unless there is a dark halo.


That's either a claim I haven't heard, or a muddle of the fact that spiral
arms are dynamic structures -- not staying the same shape or containing the
same stars. Do you have a reference?

Also, the velocity
dispersion of halo stars is consistent with dark matter.


That's because dark matter is added *after* motions are measured. And dark
matter is added (ad hoc) in just the amounts necessary to 'explain' the
rotation curve.

[another poster, re the Galactic center]
g Reference, please. I think you'll find that there are either NO
g stars or O and B stars.


I'm probably going to be sorry I asked, but why should O or B stars
have different velocities than any other stars?


O and B stars are fantastically luminous -- 4 to 5 orders of magnitude more
than later type stars (which is why they show up at a distance, and dominate
the integrated spectra of galaxies). In order to maintain this tremendous
energy output, they burn through their fuel in around a million years (as
opposed to billions of years for later types). Therefore, O and B stars
cannot be very old.

Since we believe stars condense from gas, a 'newly-born' star will begin
life with the motion of the gas cloud from which it condensed. Once any
star has condensed, it will eventually (over tens of millions to hundreds of
millions of years) be accelerated to the average motion of the other *stars*
around it. But an 'O' or a 'B' star won't live long enough to match the
general rotation of the later-type stars.

In any case, there
are plenty of late-type stars in the Galactic center region.


But we can't measure them -- because they aren't luminous enough.

greywolf42
ubi dubium ibi libertas




  #10  
Old August 20th 03, 12:50 AM
greywolf42
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Galaxies without dark matter halos?

Joseph Lazio wrote in message ...
"g" == greywolf42 writes:


I think you'll find that there are either NO stars or O and B
stars.

I'm probably going to be sorry I asked, but why should O or B stars
have different velocities than any other stars?


g [...] But an 'O' or a 'B' star won't live long enough to match the
g general rotation of the later-type stars.

But stars with orbital periods of less than 100 years have been found
in the Galactic center. These orbital periods are so short that the
stars have no "memory" of the velocity of the gas from which they were
born.

(Of course, that raises the interesting issue that we don't quite
understand how stars could form at the very center of the Galaxy.)


It could indicate a basic flaw in the observation. What's the
reference you are using?

In any case, there are plenty of late-type stars in the Galactic
center region.


g But we can't measure them -- because they aren't luminous enough.

That's why I referred you to various papers by Sellgren and
colleagues, who have measured the integrated light from late-type
stars.


1) You merely mentioned the name Sellgren, you provided no actual
reference. The reference you *did* provide demonstrated the opposite.

2) There is no such thing as 'integrated light from late-type stars'.
Except perhaps in globular clusters (which don't need dark matter).
All 'integrated light' includes (and is almost always dominated by)
'O' and 'B' stars.

Please provide a specific reference to back up your claim.

Thanks.

greywolf42
ubi dubium ibi libertas
 




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