The
phrase “caught with your pants down” means to be found in an
embarrassing situation. This is exactly what has happened to the
swaggering overconfident theorists who have been telling us for
decades that many a cosmic mystery can be explained by postulating
the existence of dark matter.
For
decades such theorists have said the behavior of galaxies cannot be
explained merely by the gravitational attraction of ordinary visible
matter. So, we have been told, there must be some kind of additional
matter, an invisible matter, what is called dark matter. No one has
ever produced direct observational evidence for such dark matter, and
the Standard Model of physics does not include dark matter. But our
dark matter theorists have insisted that there is indirect evidence
for dark matter, and have even dogmatically asserted that the
universe is 26.8% dark matter. This type of unwarranted precision
about an unknown has struck many as being an absurd case of
theoretical overconfidence.
Now a new study has cast grave doubt on whether dark matter even exists. (Interestingly, a recent article in Astronomy magazine states, “Scientists now know that dark matter comprises some 84 percent of the universe’s material,” which is so far off from the other estimate it makes you wonder whether someone's just picking numbers out of a hat.)
Now a new study has cast grave doubt on whether dark matter even exists. (Interestingly, a recent article in Astronomy magazine states, “Scientists now know that dark matter comprises some 84 percent of the universe’s material,” which is so far off from the other estimate it makes you wonder whether someone's just picking numbers out of a hat.)
As reported here and here, the
new study found that the rotation speed of galaxies correlates very
strongly with the amount of visible matter in galaxies. In other
words, if you know how much visible matter is in a galaxy, you can
accurately predict the rotation speed of that galaxy. Such a
relation is all but impossible to explain under dark matter theories.
As astrophysicist David Merrit says, “Nothing in the
standard cosmological model predicts this and it is almost impossible
to imagine how that model could be modified to explain it, without
discarding the dark matter hypothesis completely.”
The
new study seems like a bullet in the chest of dark matter theory. And
it may be the second bullet in the chest of dark matter theory. In
August scientists announced findings about a distant galaxy called
Dragonfly 44. This galaxy seems to have about roughly the mass
of our galaxy, but only emits 1 percent of the light our galaxy
emits. So astronomers stated that this Dragonfly 44 galaxy seems to
be 99.99% dark matter. But such a conclusion raises the question: how
could some galaxy get to be 99.99% dark matter, if dark matter is
only about five times more common than regular matter? Our
cosmologists have been telling us that dark matter is about five
times more common than regular matter, and that the two are mixed
throughout the universe. If two things are mixed together in a five
to one ratio, we should not expect that you would have some local
concentration that contained 99.99% of the first thing. A galaxy
that is 99.99% dark matter seems no more likely than there might form
over a town a lethal patch of the atmosphere that is 99.99% nitrogen
and only .01% oxygen, something that would cause you to die of oxygen
starvation.
Our
scientists talk dogmatically about dark matter, and present arguments
for its existence. But such arguments typically involve some
underlying assumptions such as the following:
- The only force acting to determine the structure of galaxies is gravitation.
- Gravitation acts in the simple way that matches our formulas for gravitation, rather than in some more complicated way.
Since
such assumptions are dubious, the case for dark matter is very
doubtful. What we observe is a universe behaving in strange,
mysterious ways. Our scientists try to make things look less
mysterious by making precise estimates of the composition of the
universe. It would be much more honest if such scientists admitted
that we do not understand such things.
From
a philosophical perspective, it is entirely possible that the
universe is zero percent matter. All that we have direct knowledge
of is what goes on in our own minds. Philosophers such as George
Berkeley have presented reasonable scenarios of a “mind only”
universe in which matter exists only as something perceived within a
mind.
Let
us imagine a savage living on some remote island in the Pacific
ocean. The savage knows nothing of modern science and technology, and
he often finds his little world to be a frightening place,
particularly when there are thunderstorms. Yet the savage has one
consoling thought: he thinks that the local witch doctor knows almost
everything. But one day something surprising happens: the savage sees
a distant jet airplane passing by the island, something he has never
seen before. Bewildered, the savage goes to the witch doctor, and
asks him to explain this wonder. “Oh that,” says the witch
doctor. “That was just a big insect.” Now the savage is relieved.
He can still believe that the witch doctor is a lord of
understanding.
No
doubt our cosmologists will try to explain away this latest cosmology
anomaly in some similar way. Once society has anointed a figure as a
great “lord of understanding,” such a figure will almost never
say, “You know, I really don't understand these matters.”
But
if our cosmologists were to be candid, they would cross out their
dogmatic “composition of the universe” pie charts, and replace
them with a frank diagram looking like the lower chart below.
Postscript: A new scientific paper notes that "no explanation exists so far for the observed dearth of dwarf galaxies in the local universe compared to the large number of dark matter halos predicted by" dark matter theory.
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