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Jevon23 | 1 year ago

There’s about as much evidence for the existence of dark matter as we can possibly get, short of actually observing it.

In particular we’ve observed some galaxies that seem to have little to no dark matter. Gravitationally, they behave the way that you would “naively” predict without the need to plug in a correction term that represents dark matter. This indicates that there is something physically different about these galaxies (like an unobserved substance), and it points away from MOND-style theories.

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lottin|1 year ago

You're saying that the evidence for the existence of dark matter is that your theory doesn't agree with the observation. This is like saying that you have no evidence at all.

exe34|1 year ago

No, we're saying we haven't come up with any alternative that's as good at explaining a whole lot of things.

For what it's worth, I hate it too, and I'm quietly betting on the paper a while back that showed GR was all you need as long as you can be bothered to do the really really hard maths.

Sharlin|1 year ago

Nope. It's saying that the theory didn't agree with the observation, so we came up with a hypothesis, and – guess what – we haven't found any evidence against that hypothesis, and a lot of evidence for that hypothesis even in places we didn't think we'd find some! That's 100% proper scientific method. Please don't argue against stuff you only have a strawman understanding of. Even if you're on HN and think you're smart and all.