DeiRenDopa
Master Poster
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2008
- Messages
- 2,582
I've started this thread to avoid the Quarks, [OIII], neutron stars, black holes OK; CDM not OK - Huh? thread getting bogged down.
Of course the nature of the observational evidence, and the analysis that takes observations and concludes 'here be (lots and lots of) CDM' is relevant to that thread! And it has already been discussed, in an ad hoc way, starting with this post by sol invictus.
However, it is a separate topic, and one that could easily generate a dozen pages of posts ... and it is not central to the question I want to address in that other thread ("How does it come about that an apparently intelligent, educated, thoughtful person can be quite OK with 'quarks' (which have not be 'seen' in any experiments), [OIII] 5007 (which has never been produced in any lab), neutron stars (ditto), and black holes (double ditto!), yet balk at the very thought of non-baryonic cold dark matter (CDM)?").
I'll take the following approach to addressing the observational evidence:
* observations concerning CDM in our Milky Way galaxy, and other galaxies
* observations concerning CDM in rich clusters of galaxies
* CDM in cosmology.
For the first two, I will look at the different kinds of observations that lead to the conclusion 'lots of CDM', with an emphasis on the different physical mechanisms at work (a.k.a. the different physics theories involved in the observations themselves and in the analyses of those observations), the leading limitations and questions on these, and whether there are any viable alternative conclusions (to 'here be (lots and lots of) CDM'). Of necessity, most of the history will be omitted; this is, in some ways, a pity, because that history is really quite fascinating - the errors, the wrong turns, the prescient early insights, the slow elimination of all alternatives, the huge effort put into corroboration, etc, etc, etc.
The last one (cosmology) needs to be treated in a different way, partly because it is most powerful when considered in terms of consistency, rather than a set of independent classes of observation.
My approach deliberately omits all particle physics inputs; there is a very strong set of cases concerning the existence of CDM that arise from particle physics, and these help support the conclusion in terms of consistency.
I will also not even attempt to cover astronomical observations other than those under these three headings.
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Key term: by "CDM" I will mean 'non-baryonic cold, dark matter'.
'Cold' refers to the average speed of this matter with respect to the CMB frame of reference; basically it just says this stuff isn't zipping round the universe nearly at the speed of light, unlike cosmic rays and neutrinos (the former is an example of 'hot matter', the latter 'hot dark matter').
'Dark' refers to transparency to all forms of electromagnetic radiation; DM and photons are like two ships in the night, they pass each other by without either noticing the other. In practical, astronomical, terms this simply means DM does not emit light (or gamma rays, or x-rays, or ... or radio), nor does it absorb it.
'non-baryonic' means the CDM is made up of stuff other than the molecules, atoms, nuclei, and electrons we are made up of (and the Sun, and cosmic rays, and neutron stars, and dust, and gas, and ...). Neutrinos are 'non-baryonic'; however, they are not 'cold'. The question of whether black holes get counted as non-baryonic or not will be covered in the cases where it is necessary to eliminate them as a possible explanation for the various observations.
OK, time to start.
Of course the nature of the observational evidence, and the analysis that takes observations and concludes 'here be (lots and lots of) CDM' is relevant to that thread! And it has already been discussed, in an ad hoc way, starting with this post by sol invictus.
However, it is a separate topic, and one that could easily generate a dozen pages of posts ... and it is not central to the question I want to address in that other thread ("How does it come about that an apparently intelligent, educated, thoughtful person can be quite OK with 'quarks' (which have not be 'seen' in any experiments), [OIII] 5007 (which has never been produced in any lab), neutron stars (ditto), and black holes (double ditto!), yet balk at the very thought of non-baryonic cold dark matter (CDM)?").
I'll take the following approach to addressing the observational evidence:
* observations concerning CDM in our Milky Way galaxy, and other galaxies
* observations concerning CDM in rich clusters of galaxies
* CDM in cosmology.
For the first two, I will look at the different kinds of observations that lead to the conclusion 'lots of CDM', with an emphasis on the different physical mechanisms at work (a.k.a. the different physics theories involved in the observations themselves and in the analyses of those observations), the leading limitations and questions on these, and whether there are any viable alternative conclusions (to 'here be (lots and lots of) CDM'). Of necessity, most of the history will be omitted; this is, in some ways, a pity, because that history is really quite fascinating - the errors, the wrong turns, the prescient early insights, the slow elimination of all alternatives, the huge effort put into corroboration, etc, etc, etc.
The last one (cosmology) needs to be treated in a different way, partly because it is most powerful when considered in terms of consistency, rather than a set of independent classes of observation.
My approach deliberately omits all particle physics inputs; there is a very strong set of cases concerning the existence of CDM that arise from particle physics, and these help support the conclusion in terms of consistency.
I will also not even attempt to cover astronomical observations other than those under these three headings.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Key term: by "CDM" I will mean 'non-baryonic cold, dark matter'.
'Cold' refers to the average speed of this matter with respect to the CMB frame of reference; basically it just says this stuff isn't zipping round the universe nearly at the speed of light, unlike cosmic rays and neutrinos (the former is an example of 'hot matter', the latter 'hot dark matter').
'Dark' refers to transparency to all forms of electromagnetic radiation; DM and photons are like two ships in the night, they pass each other by without either noticing the other. In practical, astronomical, terms this simply means DM does not emit light (or gamma rays, or x-rays, or ... or radio), nor does it absorb it.
'non-baryonic' means the CDM is made up of stuff other than the molecules, atoms, nuclei, and electrons we are made up of (and the Sun, and cosmic rays, and neutron stars, and dust, and gas, and ...). Neutrinos are 'non-baryonic'; however, they are not 'cold'. The question of whether black holes get counted as non-baryonic or not will be covered in the cases where it is necessary to eliminate them as a possible explanation for the various observations.
OK, time to start.