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/sci/ - Science & Math


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15708307 No.15708307 [Reply] [Original]

...where the dark matter particles?

>> No.15708308

There's some IN the Sun right now, read the shiniest bits whilst aiming at 'how do I use you'.

>> No.15708353

>>15708307
Dark matter only exists at a certain distance from the observer

>> No.15708357

>>15708353
My girlfriend only exists in Canada.

>> No.15708359

>>15708307
no where. "dark matter" is just gas and rocks we can't see because its too small.

>> No.15708446

>>15708307
Matter in a vacuum will follow the path of least resistance.
Which means that galaxies (or rather the matter in galaxy's, specifically stars and their solar systems) are stable because they don't want to get any closer to other objects.
It's why stars in the night sky stay in relatively fixed locations after they've been born.
When stars are born, the massive explosion creates a sort of "pocket" around them, which basically creates their bubble in space.
So it's not that dark energy or dark matter exist, it's that humans aren't smart enough to understand or comprehend what the universe was like prior to galaxies and their stars forming.

Same for the space between galaxies. Galaxies in each local group are moving into voids, therefore the path of least resistance. Galaxies within local groups are moving towards each other, due to the slight gravitational effect of the large masses over super huge distances.

>> No.15709529

OOOH AH OOH AH OOOH

I - I can't observe them!

>> No.15709537

>>15708359
So is there direct observation of these conveniently tiny gas and rock particles? Should be very easy since they make up most matter in the universe.

>> No.15709893

>>15708307
>where the dark matter particles?

My anus holds the dark matter particles within me!

>> No.15710011

>>15708307
If the universe is a tie-dye t-shirt, then dark matter is the part of the shirt which (from our perspective) is not currently being dyed. It's all around us and even runs through us but we can't see it because of the way we're bound up in it.

>> No.15710012
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15710012

There are no dark matter particles.

>> No.15710053

>>15710011
If that's the case, why have billions of dollars been spent on trying to observe it, and why is that money still being spent? If it's just a magical thing that does whatever you want when the math doesn't work and you can't actually ever directly observe it, why keep looking?

>> No.15710056

>>15710053
Bad guesswork from the academia retarded. It should have cost millions, not billions.

>> No.15710101

>>15710053
Because some people aren't satisfied with the explanations that I pull out of my ass.