About "dark matter"

Plasma and electricity in space. Failure of gravity-only cosmology. Exposing the myths of dark matter, dark energy, black holes, neutron stars, and other mathematical constructs. The electric model of stars. Predictions and confirmations of the electric comet.

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Roshi
Posts: 172
Joined: Wed Jan 06, 2016 9:35 am

About "dark matter"

Unread post by Roshi » Wed Jan 06, 2016 12:44 pm

Hello everyone. I read for sometime about the electric universe theory, finally I created an account here.

Was thinking about "dark matter" when I had this idea: Not only is it invisible, and passes through normal matter without any effects but gravity, it is also evenly distributed in space. This means - it's own gravity does not affect it. Because if it did, it would form stars and galaxies like the normal matter does (the mainstream tells us these are the result of gravity...).

So there would be "dark stars" and "dark galaxies"... But wait - these could not form, the dark matter would need - "dark matter 2", to account for the missing mass. Because just adding more mass in form of dark stars and galaxies does not solve the problem - galaxies do not form without some "hidden mass" evenly distributed. So - dark matter is immune to it's own gravity.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter
Dark matter plays a central role in state-of-the-art modeling of cosmic structure formation and galaxy formation and evolution
So - dark matter is immune to gravity, else it would itself form dark galaxies - needing even another form of dark matter to explain for galactic formation... Look at the picture on wikipedia, it's evenly distributed:
This artist’s impression shows the expected distribution of dark matter in the Milky Way galaxy as a blue halo of material surrounding the galaxy
Why? Does it not have gravity?... Is there not enough of it? It's 90% of the mass...

Shrike
Posts: 75
Joined: Thu Mar 10, 2011 1:29 pm
Location: Netherlands (Nederland, Holland)

Re: About "dark matter"

Unread post by Shrike » Wed Jan 06, 2016 1:20 pm

Dark mass does not exist. It's an ad-hoc addition to the (false) big bang theory to account for the high angular momentum outer stars have in a galaxy as compared to the inner stars.

In other words dark matter is a fudge factor to patch the mathematics in a gravity only model.

Roshi
Posts: 172
Joined: Wed Jan 06, 2016 9:35 am

Re: About "dark matter"

Unread post by Roshi » Wed Jan 06, 2016 1:27 pm

Shrike wrote:Dark mass does not exist. It's an ad-hoc addition to the (false) big bang theory to account for the high angular momentum outer stars have in a galaxy as compared to the inner stars.

In other words dark matter is a fudge factor to patch the mathematics in a gravity only model.
I agree. I wanted to show dark matter is even more magical than it was thought - it is not affected by gravity.

Michael Mozina
Posts: 1701
Joined: Thu Feb 23, 2012 10:35 am
Location: Mt. Shasta, CA
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Re: About "dark matter"

Unread post by Michael Mozina » Wed Jan 06, 2016 4:20 pm

Roshi wrote:Hello everyone. I read for sometime about the electric universe theory, finally I created an account here.

Was thinking about "dark matter" when I had this idea: Not only is it invisible, and passes through normal matter without any effects but gravity, it is also evenly distributed in space. This means - it's own gravity does not affect it.
As Shrike explained, "dark matter" theory is ultimately an ad-hoc "patch" that was designed to hide all the flaws in their 2006 galaxy mass estimation techniques of ordinary baryonic matter. The simply "assumed" that their galaxy mass estimation techniques were "perfect" in 2006, when in fact they grossly underestimated the number of entire stars by a whopping factor of between 3 and 20 depending on the type of galaxy and the size of the star:

http://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/forum/phpB ... =3&t=15850

That being said, the mainstream does actually assume that it's mythical "dark matter" gravitationally interacts with itself.
Because if it did, it would form stars and galaxies like the normal matter does (the mainstream tells us these are the result of gravity...).
Oh, don't worry, they claim to see those too:

http://earthsky.org/space/a-nearby-dark ... angulum-ii
This artist’s impression shows the expected distribution of dark matter in the Milky Way galaxy as a blue halo of material surrounding the galaxy
And guess what they found surrounding our galaxy in 2012, a full *six years after* their 2006 landmark paper on "dark matter"? :) Oooops, not actually "dark", it's been glowing brightly in the x-ray spectrum all along, but they just found it. :)

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chand ... _halo.html

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