Do We Need a NEW Dark Matter Model?

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We have no idea what dark matter is, other than it’s some source of gravity that is completely invisible but exerts way more pull that all of the regular matter. More than all of the stars, all of the gas, all of the black holes…unless dark matter is black holes, then black holes are most of everything. Dark matter constitutes 80% or so of the mass in the universe, which means even our Milky Way galaxy is mostly a vast ball of dark matter that happens to have attracted a relative sprinkling of baryons-atoms in the form of gas, which lit up as starry glitter spinning in the middle of this invisible gravitational well.
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  • @TimeBucks
    @TimeBucks9 ай бұрын

    Always excited to see a new spacetime episode

  • @vennilamahavlogs1924

    @vennilamahavlogs1924

    9 ай бұрын

    Very nice

  • @sandeepshrivastav7874

    @sandeepshrivastav7874

    9 ай бұрын

    Nice

  • @nihaakter4040

    @nihaakter4040

    9 ай бұрын

    Nice

  • @johnboze

    @johnboze

    9 ай бұрын

    IF PBS SPACETIME STOPPED CENSORING ME THIS VIDEO WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN MADE: @FiringRoom1 Ambient EM Field Inertial Dipole Planck Particles ARE DARK MATTER AND ENERGY AND CAUSE VACUUM PRESSURE AND GRAVITY!

  • @EzazulGaming

    @EzazulGaming

    9 ай бұрын

    Nice

  • @NoNo-nr2xv
    @NoNo-nr2xv9 ай бұрын

    Physicists: We like 5 sigma 0.00001 P value results to be confident of our data. Also Physicists: Interacting baryonic Matter is only 20%. Don't worry about adding it to the models.

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    9 ай бұрын

    physicists do not use P values. Confidence limits/intervals are the standard.

  • @geekjokes8458

    @geekjokes8458

    9 ай бұрын

    @@DrDeuteron thats astrophysics for you

  • @RandyKing314

    @RandyKing314

    9 ай бұрын

    i hope this gets cleared up soon…i don’t like mysteries mixed up in physics. after all, the dark ages have long since passed

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    9 ай бұрын

    @@geekjokes8458 ikr, looking through their little kaliedescopes

  • @MrTweetyhack

    @MrTweetyhack

    9 ай бұрын

    @@RandyKing314 the dark ages has just begun

  • @hatuletoh
    @hatuletoh9 ай бұрын

    I'm always amazed at physicist's ability to invent catchy names. Not all of their names are winners, but for a profession necessarily dominated by math people, physicists have a pretty good track record for coming up with memorable nomenclature.

  • @ProfessorJayTee

    @ProfessorJayTee

    9 ай бұрын

    You mean a profession dominated by math people who have more imagination than ordinary mathematicians? If they didn't have imagination, they'd have ended up ordinary mathematicians.

  • @Biden_is_demented

    @Biden_is_demented

    9 ай бұрын

    Notice how there is a striking similarity between this theory, and your average Star Trek technobabble. It should raise red flags up the wazzoo! It is a conundrum of our times, that such smart people seem to turn off their inherent disbelief mechanisms, and choose to just follow the crowd, even when said crowd is following what is clearly gibberish! A form of matter that you can´t see, can´t measure, and can´t quantify, but because it fits the "model" then it has to be "real"? I would have thought that "magic" and "superstition" were left back in the dark days of the Dark Age! Get enough people to believe, and you can start a movement, that others will feel compelled to adhere to, even if your intellect tells you not to. Dark matter is the high IQ equivalent to Flat Earth. Just like the Big Bang. When you ask what caused that initial singularity to come into existence to start the Big Bang in the first place, they shake their heads and utter "LA LA LA LA" until you go away, implying that is was the will of a "supreme being", on a cosmic snap of the fingers! It´s technobabble of the highest order, i tells ya!

  • @carnsoaks1

    @carnsoaks1

    9 ай бұрын

    Mathemphysicsers are human wereings too.

  • @sparking023

    @sparking023

    9 ай бұрын

    So long as it is good in describing them

  • @dieselgeezer18

    @dieselgeezer18

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Biden_is_demented Observations and mathematical models are driving us into believing that such an invisible and "magic", as you call it, form of matter exists. Its not something totally made up. Science is not as "exact" as many people think. There is a lot of trial and error and a lot of theorizing. OK, dark matter may not exist, but just because something seems crazy and impossible doesn't mean that we should just give up and say "nah thats nonsense, lets move on". As we've seen countless times with modern scientific discoveries, things that once seemed insane and crazy now have changed our society fundamentally. Let me give you some examples. We use solar panels to convert light from the sun into a "magic" substance that flows through metal and can make your stove cook food. Solid state drives store data using the quantum tunneling effect, where particles(electrons in this case) passes through SOLID matter. Solid state drives are used in your smartphone, your computer and almost anything that stores data. Nuclear power plants can power ENTIRE cities for a day and consume an amount of uranium that could be held on your hand, while a coal or natural gas powered power plant would consume TONS AND TONS of matter. They work by splitting in half the building block of matter which is so incredibly small that you cannot comprehend it. The examples could go on. People many decades ago would find all these insane and crazy. But just because it seems crazy does not mean its could not be real. The universe works in unconventional ways. Also you did not provide any real argument to falsify the claims on dark matter. You simply called it magic and superstition. I could also say that about electricity. " how is it possible for an invisible substance to flow through a non-hollow fully SOLID metal wire and power electric motors that can make cars move at 100 kilometers an hour and make computing devices that can simulate extremely realistic enviroments and solve mathematical equations in mindblowingly fast speeds?". Yet its real and has totally changed our society.

  • @StarCh33se
    @StarCh33se9 ай бұрын

    It'd be really cool to have dark matter's nature uncovered in my lifetime, but in the meantime I'll keep appreciating these updates on scientists' best guesses. Love the video!

  • @alastorgdl

    @alastorgdl

    9 ай бұрын

    Science is NO about GUESSING, dear scientism cannon fodder Science is about VERIFIED THEORIES You're in a cult and you don't even know it

  • @jovetj

    @jovetj

    9 ай бұрын

    I'll be happier when the "dark matter" "dark energy" theories are dead.

  • @KekusMagnus

    @KekusMagnus

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jovetj propose an alternative then? It just means there's matter which we haven't discovered yet, that you find that unsettling is not the universe's problem.

  • @StarCh33se

    @StarCh33se

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jovetj climate change denier, i definitely think you have something valuable to add to the conversation!

  • @spiritualawareness7736

    @spiritualawareness7736

    9 ай бұрын

    😊😊HUMAN SCIENCE is incomplete science in comparison with extraterrestrials science. Extraterrestrial science is HYPERDIMENSIONAL SCIENCE while on earth we have the wrong science Which is only based on the material physical part of our Reality but the HYPERDIMENSIONAL SCIENCE is focused on the two realities in which we exist, the MATERIAL PHYSICAL Reality and the SPIRITUAL ETHERIC REALITY. To have a complete theory of everything humans need to use HYPERDIMENSIONAL QUANTUM PHYSICS. How long will it take you to realize what I am telling you? A long time still Since 2006 I have told you by video and written that black holes are actually portals Dimensional tunnels to another reality completely different to our 3d reality with totally different and new laws of matter and energy that exist in that different reality 😊 Since 2006 i SAID THAT and Just last year is that Theoretical Quantum Physicists like MICHIO KACU are beginning to discover and talk about it, that i have been saying since 2006. 😊 HYPERDIMENSIONAL QUANTUM THEORY IS THE THEORY OF EVERYTHINGWhen will humans discover this? A lot of time at the pace at which they are advancing

  • @caffiend81
    @caffiend819 ай бұрын

    I must have picked up a disturbance in Space Time because I randomly decided to open KZread and saw this 27 seconds after it was posted. 🤣

  • @gtbkts

    @gtbkts

    9 ай бұрын

    😂😅

  • @Alex-qm6ig

    @Alex-qm6ig

    9 ай бұрын

    Or just that you are addicted to KZread like everyone is nowadays

  • @xpatrstarx

    @xpatrstarx

    9 ай бұрын

    Maybe you've become entangled with the channel?

  • @kayakMike1000

    @kayakMike1000

    9 ай бұрын

    It wasn't a disturbance in spacetime, it was a sudden harmony provided by Dr. O'dowd.

  • @kayakMike1000

    @kayakMike1000

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@Alex-qm6igI ain't addicted! I can quit anytime!

  • @Saltyarticles
    @Saltyarticles9 ай бұрын

    Matt is Definately in my top 10 of science communicators. I would love to see more videos on the physics/ mathematics of superconductors

  • @bennybundi9671

    @bennybundi9671

    9 ай бұрын

    Current or all time?

  • @delawarecop

    @delawarecop

    9 ай бұрын

    Matt, like most delusional people, follows whatever the latest trend is in Science Fiction. There is no 'dark matter'. People pursue the 'dark matter' delusion because they cannot resolve the contradictions in their materialistic world view of the Natural Universe. If I said that Dark Matter was just a Scientific term that describes the Spirit of the Creator, then everyone would be up in arms about faith based religions; yet holding faith in a Science Fiction hypothesis about something that has never measured, tested, or observed like 'Dark Matter' is just a substitute faith based religion = pure unadulterated HYPOCRISY!

  • @mastrtonberry2

    @mastrtonberry2

    9 ай бұрын

    Infinitely better than that low IQ shill, Neil Degrasse Tyson.

  • @gert-janbonnema

    @gert-janbonnema

    9 ай бұрын

    Who are the other eight beside me and Matt?

  • @jamieclarke2694

    @jamieclarke2694

    9 ай бұрын

    I feel like I'd really enjoy just listening to Matt and Brian Cox having a conversation over dinner haha

  • @GargantuanMonster
    @GargantuanMonster9 ай бұрын

    Imagine living in one of these dark satellite galaxies, with only a few stars in them. The night sky would be almost black, save for a few whisps of the nearby large galaxies. Then after the discovery of the telescope the inhabitants find the sky is full of stuff. How do they make sense of it given their strange predicament?

  • @albertodejuan6104

    @albertodejuan6104

    9 ай бұрын

    With God, of course.

  • @pierrotA

    @pierrotA

    9 ай бұрын

    If our mater is visible to them, they would have hypotesis and tehories on "shiny matter", and will think that their location is exeptionnal based on their observations, as we do too. They will have the advantage of knowing the structure of the dark mater, based on the observation of the region they can observe. They will know if the dark mater is mainly composed of black holes, particules, dead stars, or whatever. If our mater is not visible, and they can only see their own mater, they will have the same problem that us: why the univers seem more dense that we can observe ? That is, of course, if dark mater is mater... Maybe what we call dark mater is a distortion of gravity that is not link to any type of mater as we know it. Maybe space-time is distorded in way we fail to understand.

  • @phoebepalydovas9881

    @phoebepalydovas9881

    9 ай бұрын

    dark mater? i hardly knew'er!

  • @sparking023

    @sparking023

    9 ай бұрын

    Well, they would learn that the universe is much larger than they thought, just like us. The neat part about dark matter is that it is "transparent", so being inside a dense cluster shouldn't affect your observations, safe for the gravity distortion.

  • @tigerpjm

    @tigerpjm

    9 ай бұрын

    Wouldn't matter to them.

  • @JosePineda-cy6om
    @JosePineda-cy6om9 ай бұрын

    i'm still not convinced an invisible particle is the key to everything. with each iteration, DM becomes weirder and weirder. I've always thought it doesn't have to be a "one theory fits all" situation, to me it seems a variation of MOND *plus* some invisible particle (or, more likely, *several* types of particles) will finally be the key. Once you modify the behaviour of gravity at ultra small accelerations, you don't need quite as much DM

  • @tonywells6990

    @tonywells6990

    8 ай бұрын

    There are huge problems with ideas like MOND. Even if MOND is correct you still need an enormous amount of DM to create large scale structures, but you may be right about a combination.

  • @shawns0762

    @shawns0762

    5 ай бұрын

    There is a clear reason for the "missing mass". The answer has to do with what exists at the center of galaxies. Mainstream thought today is that singularities exist there. Most people don't know that Einstein said that singularities are not possible. In the 1939 journal "Annals of Mathematics" he wrote - "The essential result of this investigation is a clear understanding as to why the Schwarzchild singularities (Schwarzchild was the first to raise the issue of General Relativity predicting singularities) do not exist in physical reality. Although the theory given here treats only clusters (star clusters) whose particles move along circular paths it does seem to be subject to reasonable doubt that more general cases will have analogous results. The Schwarzchild singularities do not appear for the reason that matter cannot be concentrated arbitrarily. And this is due to the fact that otherwise the constituting particles would reach the velocity of light." He was referring to the phenomenon of dilation (sometimes called gamma or y) mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. "Time dilation" is one aspect of dilation. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". General Relativity does not predict singularities when you factor in dilation. Einstein is known to have repeatedly spoken about this. Singularities have always been a stubbornly persistent fictional term. Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. There is no place in the universe where mass is more concentrated than at the center of a galaxy. It can be shown mathematically that the mass at the center of our own galaxy must be dilated. In other words that mass is all around us. This is the explanation for the abnormally high rotation rates of stars in spiral galaxies. The "missing mass" is dilated mass. Einstein wrote about dilation occurring in "large clusters of stars" which is basically a very low mass galaxy. For a galaxy to have no/low dilation it must have very, very low mass. It has recently been confirmed in 5 very, very low mass galaxies to show no signs of dark matter. This is virtual proof that dilation is the source of the "missing mass", there can be no other realistic explanation for this fact. Dilation is the original and correct explanation for why we cannot see light from the galactic center.

  • @ShawnPitman
    @ShawnPitman9 ай бұрын

    Maybe the real dark matter is the friends we made along the way.

  • @kelbb1404

    @kelbb1404

    9 ай бұрын

    Lmao

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreations9 ай бұрын

    I would love to see some FDM simulations. Should be very interesting. At the same time, perhaps we should consider hybrid solutions - those where dark matter isn't all the same, but perhaps a myriad of particles.

  • @morgan0

    @morgan0

    9 ай бұрын

    yea i was gonna suggest, do FDM models usually consider a single wavelength, or do they consider a distribution, like mostly one but a bit on either side

  • @andrycraft69

    @andrycraft69

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@ntdm25Pretty bad miscalculation for it to have remained unnoticed to thousands of physicists for decades.

  • @jakublizon6375

    @jakublizon6375

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@ntdm25It's really not. There is something there, it's just extremely difficult to identify.

  • @JCO2002

    @JCO2002

    9 ай бұрын

    @@ntdm25 Somewhat like cosmic inflation? ;-)

  • @DFloyd84

    @DFloyd84

    9 ай бұрын

    I tried to do an FDM simulation, but the nozzle went all BLEGH a couple hours into the printing and spat out something to do with string theory.😁

  • @atharvamirashi
    @atharvamirashi9 ай бұрын

    I'm currently studying about both these problems in college (the Too big to fail problem and the density diversity problem). One of the explanations for not seeing the sub halos is that in some of these ultra faint dwarf satellites their star formation stopped sometime during the epoch of reionization and therefore we receive much less amount of light from them. Either reionization or ram-pressure stripping could have pushed the gas out of those subhalos very efficiently. Although this "fix" isn't completely sufficient to solve the problem entirely it's one of the explanations why it could cause such variations.

  • @nodarkthings

    @nodarkthings

    8 ай бұрын

    have you ever considered that the model may be false and that this invented invisible material that no one can see.... actually.... doesn't exist?? surely this is what pseudoscientists do when their model is shown to be false?

  • @shawns0762

    @shawns0762

    5 ай бұрын

    There is a clear reason for the "missing mass". The answer has to do with what exists at the center of galaxies. Mainstream thought today is that singularities exist there. Most people don't know that Einstein said that singularities are not possible. In the 1939 journal "Annals of Mathematics" he wrote - "The essential result of this investigation is a clear understanding as to why the Schwarzchild singularities (Schwarzchild was the first to raise the issue of General Relativity predicting singularities) do not exist in physical reality. Although the theory given here treats only clusters (star clusters) whose particles move along circular paths it does seem to be subject to reasonable doubt that more general cases will have analogous results. The Schwarzchild singularities do not appear for the reason that matter cannot be concentrated arbitrarily. And this is due to the fact that otherwise the constituting particles would reach the velocity of light." He was referring to the phenomenon of dilation (sometimes called gamma or y) mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. "Time dilation" is one aspect of dilation. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". General Relativity does not predict singularities when you factor in dilation. Einstein is known to have repeatedly spoken about this. Singularities have always been a stubbornly persistent fictional term. Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. There is no place in the universe where mass is more concentrated than at the center of a galaxy. It can be shown mathematically that the mass at the center of our own galaxy must be dilated. In other words that mass is all around us. This is the explanation for the abnormally high rotation rates of stars in spiral galaxies. The "missing mass" is dilated mass. Einstein wrote about dilation occurring in "large clusters of stars" which is basically a very low mass galaxy. For a galaxy to have no/low dilation it must have very, very low mass. It has recently been confirmed in 5 very, very low mass galaxies to show no signs of dark matter. This is virtual proof that dilation is the source of the "missing mass", there can be no other realistic explanation for this fact. Dilation is the original and correct explanation for why we cannot see light from the galactic center.

  • @nuclearocean
    @nuclearocean7 ай бұрын

    I can't say I understood everything, but the visuals are hypnotizing

  • @Lantalia
    @Lantalia9 ай бұрын

    I'm still betting that the real answer is "many of the above", with multiple dark matter candidates turning out to exist in meaningful quantities

  • @unvergebeneid

    @unvergebeneid

    9 ай бұрын

    Eh, Occam's razor and stuff.

  • @thelongestyoutubechannelev6433

    @thelongestyoutubechannelev6433

    9 ай бұрын

    Yeh seems like it

  • @thelongestyoutubechannelev6433

    @thelongestyoutubechannelev6433

    9 ай бұрын

    Probably

  • @w.o.jackson8432

    @w.o.jackson8432

    9 ай бұрын

    @@unvergebeneid Occam's Razor isn't a law of the universe.

  • @milferdjones2573

    @milferdjones2573

    9 ай бұрын

    I love it in my far future Sci Fi there is a whole periodic table of Dark Matter and then the future discovery of Invisible Matter that being particles that don't interact with anything in normal space even Gravity instead forming a second universe we can not easily observe. Then many different types of Dark and Invisible Energy. Allows massively faster than Causality scanning and communication example invisible fields that if you provide a equal amount of energy to them to transfer back to matter and energy they interact with you get a non gravity bound sensor or communication that can't be detected by the things it interacts with. Fun part back to the serious is maybe we are actually right now dealing with NIMP's instead meaning Non Interacting Particles. Then we might not be able to solve the Dark Matter problem for a very long time if at all having to accept they exists even though we can't find them.

  • @EMAngel2718
    @EMAngel27189 ай бұрын

    I wonder if a mix of types of dark matter could be at play, with different mixtures having different properties; it does seem odd that so much of the universe's mass would be a single type of thing

  • @Merennulli

    @Merennulli

    9 ай бұрын

    That is the obvious thing to try, but any model has to still solve the problem of what we've observed and a lot of the mixture options just don't fit, combining problems rather than solving them. Right now, Mixed Dark Matter (MDM) is mostly looking at mixing CDM and UltraLight Axionlike particles (ULAs).

  • @castonyoung7514

    @castonyoung7514

    9 ай бұрын

    While that's what I'm hoping for, and perhaps have some very circumstantial reasons to think this is likely the case; I don't see how it would be unnatural at all for 80% of the universe to be one thing. After all, think of how much hydrogen there is compared to every other element, or how much of your body is made of water. I'd say transformations of the inverse square law are just as common as they are uncommon, if not more so.

  • @rohrertech8882

    @rohrertech8882

    9 ай бұрын

    Not even a theory, just an idea, but what if the dark matter was as diverse as our common matter in terms of density and energy. Could there be 100 kinds of dark matter, with different speeds and energies. Would certainly make the calculations a nightmare, but if wimps were of differing mass,(or interactive strength) how would that affect the models? Would high energy wimps be less likely to interact with normal matter?

  • @marckiezeender

    @marckiezeender

    9 ай бұрын

    I agree. The thing about CDM is that it doesn't differentiate between WIMPs and any other non-relativistic particle. I.e. dark matter particles could be the size and/or mass of an entire planet, and it would still behave like CDM on a galactic scale.

  • @marckiezeender

    @marckiezeender

    9 ай бұрын

    @@rohrertech8882 All non-relativistic weakly interacting particles would behave like cold dark matter (see my other comment ^^^)

  • @tommylakindasorta3068
    @tommylakindasorta30689 ай бұрын

    Great work -- this channel is phenomenal.

  • @hayuseen6683
    @hayuseen66839 ай бұрын

    Wonderful dive into the challenges of explaining things

  • @tr48092
    @tr480929 ай бұрын

    It seems that dark matter is dish best served cold.

  • @OrdenJust

    @OrdenJust

    9 ай бұрын

    Is that like revenge? Or gazpacho?

  • @fab.9629

    @fab.9629

    9 ай бұрын

    sth not prone to decay..dried corn?

  • @MartinH81
    @MartinH819 ай бұрын

    Every time CDM is discussed I get more confused. not only about the how/why, but also about the scientific conduct surrounding this topic. I work in biomedical sciences, a different field of science, but the scientific principle is a pretty universal one and I have a lot of difficulty accepting CDM as being truly scientific. If I'd grow cells in a lab and they grow weird and my professor asks me which serum I use and I'd answer "don't worry, it's just 20% of the medium" he would tell me I'm an idiot and he would be totally right. It's a simplistic example perhaps, but I was flabbergasted to just learn that phycisists made this flaw in the simulations and that you are so forgiving about it in this video. Though I know/understand why you are, as these are your colleagues. I have always assumed normal matter was included, because that would make the most scientific sense and to my memory it was never mentioned that these were CDM-only w/o normal matter. Especially because the other 80% is so vaguely defined you'd definitely want to add the 20% of the mix which you know most about. If so, then you did an absolutely great job unveiling this. I'm not the first who argues it's strange scientific conduct to invent a particle, which is completely invisible, only interacts gravitationally, then tweak the parameters of this elusive particle in such a way that it fits observations again and then fully adopt its existence and validity. Then more particles with more assumptions are added into the mix and simulations, those also being tweaked based on...nothing?...no experimental validation or whatsoever. How's that scientific? I'm not surprised simulations show similarity with reality, as the simulation is biased by the same assumptions. This whole field of research on CDM seems to lean heavily on circular reasoning to me. We are being educated that a scientific theory is not just an idea as many think of when they hear theory. A (good) scientific theory not only describes reality, but also makes correct predictions. CDM does neither, for decades. I'm totally fine with the idea that I'm not a cosmologist, therefore it's likely way over my head and that I simply don't understand enough about it, but the scientific conduct of this whole field of science is so alien to me. I'd love to see a video which discusses the scientific argumentation and especially scientific validity for each step in the development of this model.

  • @legitskilz901

    @legitskilz901

    9 ай бұрын

    Your speaking on too many different levels of applicability for a good answer to be given. The hard part is there’s about 3 levels for sure for sure. I explain it like 1. Black holes being undefined unmetered pure energy. 2. The show “futurama” black holes to alow easier explanation of string theory, time travel, and choice/love 3.

  • @fewwiggle

    @fewwiggle

    9 ай бұрын

    Your concerns mirror my own (by about 10% :-) I wish they would present this type of stuff as more "speculations", than as "theories"

  • @chuckschillingvideos

    @chuckschillingvideos

    9 ай бұрын

    The notion of "dark matter" is as far from actual science as you can get. It is somewhere on a scale between wild speculation and hopelessly wishful thinking.

  • @benblas164

    @benblas164

    9 ай бұрын

    I remember learning in Physics history that is was commonly accepted that heat was a "thing" that flowed between objects rather that a property of the object itself. I've always drawn parallels between that and dark matter. I've always wondered about Dark matter just being regular old matter, maybe not as simple as a bunch of hydrogen atoms, but what about a "soup" of subatomic particles (Bosons, Hadrons, and Fermions) flying through space weakly interacting with more rigid atomic structures we can observe. I agree that inventing a new form of matter and then just tweaking it until it fits our observations is a bit backwards, however astrophysics does not have the luxury of the scientific method, there is no way to empirically test hypotheses, the best we can do if start with our observations and invent reasons for why that may be. I would really love for someone to tell me why dark matter could not be just regular old dispersed matter :)

  • @fewwiggle

    @fewwiggle

    9 ай бұрын

    @@benblas164 In most cases, astrophysics can't be 'tested', but a theory has consequences, so it inevitably makes predictions about what we will observe. And, when a prediction is falsified, that theory should be kaput.

  • @peterb9038
    @peterb90389 ай бұрын

    Sounds like a few other variables or events have been forgotten in those simulations. Look forward to hearing about results based on refinements.

  • @vinnieg6161
    @vinnieg61619 ай бұрын

    every time a new space time video gets out I have to put on my thinking cap,

  • @JonoSSD
    @JonoSSD9 ай бұрын

    Quick question: do these models take into consideration dark energy at all? Or it doesn't make sense because at these scales (inside of galaxies) gravity wins over it anyway?

  • @marckiezeender

    @marckiezeender

    9 ай бұрын

    They do take dark energy into account. They generally model it using the cosmological constant assumption. In fact, dark matter halo radius is essentially defined as: anything outside this radius is being pulled away by dark energy/expansion, and anything inside this radius is being pulled in by gravity

  • @misterlau5246

    @misterlau5246

    9 ай бұрын

    That's the uppercase Lambda, the cosmological constant in general relativity, Expansion

  • @iavdortmunder8132
    @iavdortmunder81329 ай бұрын

    Loved this breakdown of the problems with modelling Dark Matter, keep up the great work I'm sure you guys will figure it out :) One is forced to consider what Matt would be like as a dark matter simulation and would we be able to see and hear him I guess not but you'd have to wonder what part if any of Matt would persist?

  • @PajamaMan44
    @PajamaMan449 ай бұрын

    I don’t consider 20% to be a small fraction tbh. Seems silly to ignore it

  • @kevincronk7981
    @kevincronk79819 ай бұрын

    Wow 2.92 mil subscribers, this channel has really grown and I love that

  • @Jondiceful
    @Jondiceful9 ай бұрын

    This is one topic that never seems to get dull. I hope we get more episodes on the um... matter... to shine some more light on the um... dark mystery and the tweaked variations of the models meant to explain it all.

  • @geniej2378
    @geniej23789 ай бұрын

    Reading through the comments, I think it’s worth a mention of why Baryonic matter was excluded from earlier simulations. My guess is that computer simulations and compute power available to scientists to run these simulations has vastly improved over the years, and it wasn’t a “lazy” oversight.

  • @garynicolson5192

    @garynicolson5192

    9 ай бұрын

    It's because normal matter has complex interactions, such as stars, novas etc. Dark matter is easily simulated as a non-interactive fluid/gas modeled just with gravity.

  • @reubenpreciado
    @reubenpreciado9 ай бұрын

    it would be really neat to see an episode on gravitational atoms! thanks for the great work

  • @ryewaldman2214
    @ryewaldman22149 ай бұрын

    I'm glad you touched on the gravitational coupling between dark matter and baryonic matter, and how baryonic matter acts as a third party mediator to communicate electromagnetic interaction. It's like dark matter can, in the presence of baryonic matter, interact with (influence) other matter. electromagnetic interaction with extra steps? The more dark matter you have, the more baryonic matter you'll gravitationally attract, which in turn gravitationally influences dark matter. The forces of interaction amongst baryonic matter will modulate gravitational effects felt by dark matter. In fluid mechanics we use can use field equations to describe fluids as a continuum when the Knudsen number is sufficiently small (the length scales of molecular integrations is small compared to the length scales of the flow that we're interested). This allows us to drastically simplify our calculations by replacing the need to consider molecular dynamics with a simple constitutive model of the fluid. In this case, i presume that dark matter can be treated as a continuum, defined by the local density and temperature, with the interactions due to gravity a function of the density. Is there a length scale that is large enough that we treat all baryonic matter as a continuum with a simple constitutive model? I can't imagine the need to simulate the dynamics of star formation, death, and supernova directly in these universe-scale models just to account for the gravitational influence of baryonic matter on dark matter. I assume that there is some statistical representation that would give a relationship for pressure, temperature, charge, internal energy, density, viscosity, etc of baryonic matter and we would have a set of governing field equations for the dark matter and the baryonic matter that would be coupled by way of gravitational interaction. Otherwise, the range of length and timescales required to couple dark matter and baryonic matter in single calculation seems like it would be as ridiculous as trying to simulate a 747 flying in icy weather using molecular dynamics. Is there a "Knudsen number" for baryonic matter at universe length scales where it can be treated as a continuous field and what would its constitutive model look like?

  • @agusr32

    @agusr32

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, these simulations usually have millions or billions of different "particles" that represent dark matter, gas, stars, etc. For instance, a single gas particle's mass can be of millions of solar masses. Thus these simulations need to use algorithms that "create" stars, heat the gas, produce supernova feedback, etc. whenever certain conditions are met, because it is impossible to resolve these processes with the simulation's resolution. These "length" scales are basically the simulation's resolution.

  • @user-hp1mt9du6t

    @user-hp1mt9du6t

    9 ай бұрын

    I'm afraid dark matter does not exist at all. We're somewhere wrong about the nature of our Universe. But I'm a great fan of dark energy, which is hidden somewhere behind our regular matter. As soon as we understand dark energy, we can speculate on the nature of our Universe, thus putting everything together - light, energy, matter, gravitation, quantum, etc. Otherwise we are blind. And creating artificial realities. Nothing personal. I'm just not a fan of Multiverse either. Our Universe is fair enough for String Theory, probability, causality etc.

  • @AustinFeltron

    @AustinFeltron

    9 ай бұрын

    @@user-hp1mt9du6t if it’s not axions then I doubt dark matter is even real either. Axions fix the strong CP problem and would just be another scalar boson like the Higgs. I don’t have real physics qualifications, but it seems like a piece of the puzzle that would fit very nicely. If we prove dark matter isn’t axions I think it might be time to seriously reconsider our theory of gravity, which some have done already.

  • @user-hp1mt9du6t

    @user-hp1mt9du6t

    9 ай бұрын

    @@AustinFeltron Bull's Eye! Not a fan of Higgs either. I prefer gravitons to axions and it all makes more sense. Hypothetical too, but more realistic in SF or just NEW physics. Gravitational theory must be rewritten. Fully agreed.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    9 ай бұрын

    @@AustinFeltron​​⁠​​⁠ *...but it seems like a piece of the puzzle that fits very nicely.* Saying "it seems like a piece of the puzzle that fits very nicely" is not a valid argument for any conclusion. It amounts to nothing more than "X is true because I like the idea of it being true." *If we prove dark matter isn't axions, then I think it seriously might be time to reconsider our theory of gravity...* Sorry, but this is not how it works. You not liking the case where dark matter is not constituted by axioms has no actual implications with regards to how empirically accurate our dark matter model is. *...which some have done already.* This defeats your previous point, especially as these alternatives do not fit the observations either.

  • @mortyrickerson6322
    @mortyrickerson63229 ай бұрын

    Love this channel so much

  • @Locut0s
    @Locut0s9 ай бұрын

    It's good that we are starting to get a HUGE flood of new data from all the new telescopes and surveys that are going to be coming on line in the near future. There have been just WAY too many neatly fine tuned models over the recent decades that are hard to disprove because we just haven't had a lot of new data. Both in particle and astrophysics.

  • @GregorBarclay

    @GregorBarclay

    9 ай бұрын

    @@satan899I will never understand what accounts like yours are trying to achieve.

  • @TheDarkToes

    @TheDarkToes

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@GregorBarclaythey are trying to achieve... The ability to watch and comment on KZread.

  • @nelson_rebel3907

    @nelson_rebel3907

    8 ай бұрын

    @@GregorBarclay Same thing yours is? Discussion and conversation? Or is the general disdain for any comment your only notable achievement in life?

  • @GregorBarclay

    @GregorBarclay

    8 ай бұрын

    @@nelson_rebel3907 @TheDarkToes Sorry guys, think you're white-knighting for a comment you've not read - I'm replying to @satan899, who appears to have now deleted their post, which was encouraging us to repent our sins and kneel down to their particular god. But yeah, I've got some achievements! I came second in a hundred metre running race on a beach when I was nine. Admittedly, there were only two kids competing but chalk up the wins where you can, right?

  • @yyyy-uv3po
    @yyyy-uv3po9 ай бұрын

    The mystery thickens and attracts more mystery in the process.

  • @fkret3707
    @fkret37079 ай бұрын

    great video as always! i wanted to ask how sure we are that dark matter is only made out of 1 type of matter and not a combination of the different suggested dark matter types?

  • @castonyoung7514

    @castonyoung7514

    9 ай бұрын

    No, I think it's been hypothesized that every standard particle might have a dark counterpart; however, starting from some random number of dark matter components and then simulating every possible combination of properties they have is going to be much harder than forming one theory that describes the statistical mechanics of dark matter as a whole. Even if we found a combination of particles and properties that matched the data perfectly, we'd have to throw all of it out in favor of the properties they have as a whole, as that is the only thing that can be measured with certainty at the moment. Everything else would just be speculation. That being said it might be a good idea to try simulating mixtures of particles that are already predicted by other theories as dark matter candidates.

  • @Aut0mati0n
    @Aut0mati0n9 ай бұрын

    The ‘Too big to fail’ problem is perfectly named

  • @xzysyndrome

    @xzysyndrome

    3 ай бұрын

    Super String...."Too big to fail" Look at all the grant devourers who have spent millions producing nothing at all....Some real big names too....Michio (Cough) ooo...my bad.

  • @FacepalmProduction7
    @FacepalmProduction79 ай бұрын

    I'm so gladf this show exists, signed up for the patreon :)

  • @mixstudio-sham1463
    @mixstudio-sham14639 ай бұрын

    Great job Matt, interesting as always.

  • @a3d4e
    @a3d4e9 ай бұрын

    What if dark matter does not exist, and the current gravitational model just needs to be revised at scale?

  • @StreakyBaconMan

    @StreakyBaconMan

    9 ай бұрын

    Alternate theories of gravity aren't anything new, people have even used them to try and explain away dark matter before - the problem is that dark matter isn't uniformly spread across the universe and we've observed galaxies with hardly any dark matter, and other galaxies that are almost entirely dark matter. That's where modified theories of gravity fall apart - they start failing to make accurate predictions about such galaxies, when if it was an accurate theory of how gravity works it should make accurate predictions about all galaxies and not just galaxies that have average amounts of dark matter. It's also just unlikely we've got gravity that wrong considering how accurate the predictions we can make using that theory - like using the theory of gravity scientists were able to predict that black holes would exist decades before we had the technology to confirm they did in fact exist.

  • @Galadonin
    @Galadonin9 ай бұрын

    I've been a sub for some time now, and I'll always click on the notification, thanks for everything

  • @michaelsetter3647
    @michaelsetter36479 ай бұрын

    Great topic, I thoroughly enjoyed this one!

  • @ArtVandelayLTEX
    @ArtVandelayLTEX9 ай бұрын

    You're so good at this I need to watch it 3 times.

  • @sir.games7668
    @sir.games76689 ай бұрын

    This is so interesting, like how modern physics changed classical and how gravity was defined at first and how it is now by general relativity or even how we interpret it at quantum level. It's so fascinating and it shows how scientific knowledge is ever growing. First, draw a wild deduction from an observation and then work on it until it is more plausible and until it is the truth, and I like how many theories were rejected and many taking its place. It's an ever-growing pool of knowledge, and I am here for it.

  • @user-lq9oi5jq3n

    @user-lq9oi5jq3n

    9 ай бұрын

    Awesome.

  • @alansnyder8448
    @alansnyder84489 ай бұрын

    Really appreciate these deep dives in the Dark Matter debates. When we finally come to a solution, hopefully in my lifetime, I'll appreciate having known the details of how we got there.

  • @KieranLeCam

    @KieranLeCam

    9 ай бұрын

    Hahaha me too :)

  • @johnboze

    @johnboze

    9 ай бұрын

    IF PBS SPACETIME STOPPED CENSORING ME THIS VIDEO WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN MADE: @FiringRoom1 Ambient EM Field Inertial Dipole Planck Particles in Vacuum ARE DARK MATTER AND ENERGY AND CAUSE VACUUM PRESSURE AND GRAVITY!

  • @james6401

    @james6401

    9 ай бұрын

    Indeed.

  • @shawns0762

    @shawns0762

    5 ай бұрын

    There is a clear reason for the "missing mass". The answer has to do with what exists at the center of galaxies. Mainstream thought today is that singularities exist there. Most people don't know that Einstein said that singularities are not possible. In the 1939 journal "Annals of Mathematics" he wrote - "The essential result of this investigation is a clear understanding as to why the Schwarzchild singularities (Schwarzchild was the first to raise the issue of General Relativity predicting singularities) do not exist in physical reality. Although the theory given here treats only clusters (star clusters) whose particles move along circular paths it does seem to be subject to reasonable doubt that more general cases will have analogous results. The Schwarzchild singularities do not appear for the reason that matter cannot be concentrated arbitrarily. And this is due to the fact that otherwise the constituting particles would reach the velocity of light." He was referring to the phenomenon of dilation (sometimes called gamma or y) mass that is dilated is smeared through spacetime relative to an outside observer. "Time dilation" is one aspect of dilation. It's the phenomenon behind the phrase "mass becomes infinite at the speed of light". General Relativity does not predict singularities when you factor in dilation. Einstein is known to have repeatedly spoken about this. Singularities have always been a stubbornly persistent fictional term. Dilation will occur wherever there is an astronomical quantity of mass because high mass means high momentum. There is no place in the universe where mass is more concentrated than at the center of a galaxy. It can be shown mathematically that the mass at the center of our own galaxy must be dilated. In other words that mass is all around us. This is the explanation for the abnormally high rotation rates of stars in spiral galaxies. The "missing mass" is dilated mass. Einstein wrote about dilation occurring in "large clusters of stars" which is basically a very low mass galaxy. For a galaxy to have no/low dilation it must have very, very low mass. It has recently been confirmed in 5 very, very low mass galaxies to show no signs of dark matter. This is virtual proof that dilation is the source of the "missing mass", there can be no other realistic explanation for this fact. Dilation is the original and correct explanation for why we cannot see light from the galactic center.

  • @Killerbot-jn6xi
    @Killerbot-jn6xi9 ай бұрын

    Maybe blackholes in the center of galaxies have more of an effect on the dark matter density than we think?

  • @juustokasajuustokasa6109
    @juustokasajuustokasa61099 ай бұрын

    The acronym for Weakly Interacting Massive Particles must be one of the most spot on acronyms in science. I bet it gave a good chuckle to those who started calling these type of particles Weakly Interacting Massive Particles.

  • @SailingSVPipedream
    @SailingSVPipedream9 ай бұрын

    I love Spacetime. Matt’s dulcet tones are the perfect cure for those nights when I can not go straight to sleep. I open Spacetime and by the time 5-8mins have passed, I am fast asleep - every time. Even when I am on the ferry or surrounded by noise. The only problem is that I now know a lot of questions, but never stay awake long enough to get any answers.

  • @King-Ender
    @King-Ender9 ай бұрын

    Great video man👍🏻👍🏻! I’m currently getting a bachelors degree in physics and then going for a masters and a PhD in Astrophysics and videos like this helps out a lot for me. Thank you for making these kind of videos.

  • @pacotaco1246

    @pacotaco1246

    9 ай бұрын

    Did you get to the Virial Theorem yet?

  • @stevenverrall4527

    @stevenverrall4527

    9 ай бұрын

    TIP: Don't climb on the DM or string theory bandwagons because they are tipping over!

  • @pacotaco1246

    @pacotaco1246

    9 ай бұрын

    @stevenverrall4527 bandwagoning is always a bad idea, especially in science. Stay skeptical, seek evidence

  • @King-Ender

    @King-Ender

    9 ай бұрын

    @@pacotaco1246Now I’m curious, what do you mean by tipping over?

  • @King-Ender

    @King-Ender

    9 ай бұрын

    @@pacotaco1246Thank you for the advise, I will keep that in mind. I was actually planning on studying other stuff like black holes, white holes, and DM & DE. That stuff interests me a lot and would love to learn more about them.

  • @queueeeee9000
    @queueeeee90009 ай бұрын

    It's always cool to see new ways of breaking youtube compression. Love it 😂

  • @paulcoy9060
    @paulcoy90609 ай бұрын

    6:30 That spiral galaxy moving in a counter-clockwise manner really hurts my eyes, with the arms facing the wrong way.

  • @lordoftherings999
    @lordoftherings9999 ай бұрын

    Actually dark matter is much older than we’d think. It was first conceived by Lord Kelvin in 1870s (the same scientist who first theorised universal Heat Death in 50s and a very “euristic” form of Big Rip). A lot of things have changed since these years, but still dark matter and energy remain a fascinating mystery.

  • @dubsar
    @dubsar9 ай бұрын

    If matter in the universe clumps together and falls in black holes, does it mean that entropy is actually decreasing? As the gravitational wells become stronger - I think as a tablecloth being pulled down through a hole at the centre of a table - does it stretch the tablecloth that is still on the table, making breadcrumbs (galaxies) further apart from each other? Is "dark energy" just a way the universe balances the effects of increasingly strong gravitational wells?

  • @JanVerny

    @JanVerny

    9 ай бұрын

    We have no idea how the structure inside of a black hole looks. Our models break down and produce impossible and unimaginable infinities. But even so, the black holes are most likely not decreasing entropy. Entropy is a measure of how difficult it is to describe a state of a closed system. And not only it is very unlikely that matter in black holes becomes highly ordered, but due to the predicted effects of Hawking radiation, that matter is burned and radiated away later in a super chaotic manner. Meaning we're almost certain that black holes increase entropy just like every other physical process.

  • @yishakibrahim
    @yishakibrahim9 ай бұрын

    Great Episode as always! Just being picky at 6:25 Galaxy rotation must be the other way round🧐

  • @user-hx2xl2km2e
    @user-hx2xl2km2e9 ай бұрын

    This Hollywood actor pronounces everything correctly. I am amazed

  • @ryankolter6271
    @ryankolter62719 ай бұрын

    Could CDM dark matter have created a large number of satellite galaxies, but those galaxies have since been absorbed by their parent? Could we count how many satellite galaxies the Milky Way has consumed by looking at how small groups of stars move around the galaxy?

  • @marckiezeender

    @marckiezeender

    9 ай бұрын

    We have looked at groups of stars in the Milky Way that can be traced back to galaxy mergers, but it doesn't seem likely that ALL of the galaxies merged. The missing satellites problem is essentially resolved though, so it doesn't matter

  • @xBINARYGODx

    @xBINARYGODx

    9 ай бұрын

    We don't need to be over-concerned with the Mily way - we can see other galaxies, and what they looked like billions of years ago.

  • @xBINARYGODx

    @xBINARYGODx

    9 ай бұрын

    @@marckiezeender no its not resolved

  • @atharvamirashi

    @atharvamirashi

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@xBINARYGODxwe also have the small problem of not being able to detect their satellite galaxies tho. Just in our local group there are, what are called ultra faint dwarf satellites that could be detected with just the deepest of observations. Anything out of the local group and we have a small chance of detecting a satellite dwarf galaxy and further estimating how many of those dwarf galaxies can be pulled in by the central big galaxy or stripped of materials via tidal stripping.

  • @TheGr8scott
    @TheGr8scott9 ай бұрын

    Thank you Matt for keeping it real and not being a sellout like many public figure "scientists" these days who speak on all kinds of irrelevant topics outside their field or whatever is popular on tiktok.

  • @pcarter1989
    @pcarter19899 ай бұрын

    I sense some underlying emotion in that delivery of "gravity wells."

  • @Number8Soft
    @Number8Soft9 ай бұрын

    "The Wimp miracle" might be my new favorite term in physics

  • @macrozone
    @macrozone9 ай бұрын

    Flicking through some comments I get a feeling that just because the word „dark“ is in the term „dark matter“, it sounds very mysterious to some and therefore must be wrong and a stupid idea from those silly scientists. But is it really so absurd to think that there are much more particles out there that just don‘t interact often? I think its a very straight forward and rather simple idea. And i also think its named nicely.

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    9 ай бұрын

    Sure, I think the name is a problem, because it misleads people. However, you are giving the commenters too much credit. This attitude of "the scientists are all wrong" can be found everywhere on the Internet on every single topic out there, not just on the topic of dark matter. This is a much bigger problem, and it is a problem of laypeople being simultaneously ignorant and arrogant.

  • @stevevermeer1797
    @stevevermeer17979 ай бұрын

    I agree with Edwin, would love an update on the latest on superconductors. Great job Matt, interesting as always.

  • @robertdavie1221
    @robertdavie12219 ай бұрын

    Fascinating and very well explained!

  • @CACBCCCU
    @CACBCCCU9 ай бұрын

    You should consider El Gordo much like it's a compound lens system with a weak foreground field and a local condensing lens. Lensing patterns often have uniquely reduced divergences growing over distance, they can seem dissociated positionally from primary lenses. A single simple lensing mass is not particularly good at reconverging, let alone mirror-like reversing with doubling. With a compound lensing system one can imagine a removable screen in front of a secondary lens viewed beyond focus distance. Adding a rippled lens simplifies a lot of things, including explaining mirror-doubled near-parallel flat lensing image arcs, using radially-oriented projections for ripple-spanning galaxies seen edge-on.

  • @a.k.burgess1981
    @a.k.burgess19819 ай бұрын

    please do a space time podcast, i would love to listen to matt speak with others more :)

  • @trumpingtonfanhurst694
    @trumpingtonfanhurst6949 ай бұрын

    Considering recent observations are blowing up some of science's most closely held beliefs, I'd say we need a new model for most things.

  • @narfwhals7843

    @narfwhals7843

    9 ай бұрын

    Nothing is being "blown up". Interesting results are being misreported as paradigm shifts for profit.

  • @DrOtto-sx7cp

    @DrOtto-sx7cp

    9 ай бұрын

    🤣👍

  • @davidfiler7439

    @davidfiler7439

    9 ай бұрын

    Baby jesus?

  • @Scion141

    @Scion141

    9 ай бұрын

    @@narfwhals7843 Sounds like @trumpingtonfanhurst694 has been reading news headlines and taking them as facts.

  • @shaecloud4403
    @shaecloud44039 ай бұрын

    Loving this series

  • @Ethan-cz8xq
    @Ethan-cz8xq9 ай бұрын

    One thing I've always wondered is if dark matter doesn't interact strongly with the other fundamental forces besides gravity, couldn't it be possible that dark matter interacts by other forces that don't affect regular matter? I'm not anywhere close to an expert though and there'd be no way to test this.

  • @DrDeuteron

    @DrDeuteron

    9 ай бұрын

    that is reasonable. My theory, ruled out by observations, is that the 5 times baryonic mass dark matter is made up of 5 dark copies of the standard model..such that each see themselves as 20% of the matter in the universe...but they all have intra-interactions per your post....forming dark stars, shining dark photons, with dark planet and dark civilization... Then the parallel universes are not parallel, they occupy the same space we're in. idk, be cool, but it's not distributed properly.

  • @feynstein1004
    @feynstein10049 ай бұрын

    Could it be that in the beginning, there were equal amounts of matter, antimatter and dark matter but because of the asymmetry of the weak force, the antimatter got converted into dark matter while normal matter remained? This reminds me, does dark matter also have its anti- counterpart i.e. anti-dark matter? 🤔

  • @resistancefm5133

    @resistancefm5133

    9 ай бұрын

    I don't think so, because Dark Matter doesn't interact with the electromagnetic force it can't have an electric charge, and the relationship between matter and anti-matter is defined by having opposite electric charges.

  • @flambambam3578

    @flambambam3578

    9 ай бұрын

    @@resistancefm5133 Where are you getting this from? The three flavors of neutrinos are all neutral and still have anti-particles.

  • @michaelsommers2356

    @michaelsommers2356

    9 ай бұрын

    @@resistancefm5133 There is more to antimatter then opposite electric charge. After all, there are anti-neutrinos, and neutrinos have no charge.

  • @20ZZ20

    @20ZZ20

    9 ай бұрын

    maybe there is anti-dark matter but it is irrelevant because it doesn't interact with anything

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    9 ай бұрын

    @@flambambam3578Neutrinos have chirality. Antimatter also flips the chirality.

  • @TheRealSpiderMew
    @TheRealSpiderMew9 ай бұрын

    What if Dark Matter is the Weight of Time generated by all the mass of everything else in the space, and Time does have a Particle but we can only observe the effect at a distance?

  • @fab.9629

    @fab.9629

    9 ай бұрын

    i guess i should agree on some time-axis but probably wouldn’t call it weight..moments collected do not weigh, my best example is a campfire where our known elements come together to form a permanent stream (licking flames, glowing embers) of perpetual now in a very nuanced fashion. i‘d love to live and see cdm explained as invisibly ( to us ) shaping manifest moments of matter

  • @michaelsommers2356

    @michaelsommers2356

    9 ай бұрын

    What if dark matter is unicorn droppings?

  • @Merennulli

    @Merennulli

    9 ай бұрын

    @@michaelsommers2356 Professor Farnsworth's smell-o-scope has largely ruled out that possibility. Unless the odors are weakly interacting, meaning only whatever dealt it can have smelt it.

  • @JustinLe

    @JustinLe

    9 ай бұрын

    that's not consistent with experimental observations I think, so it doesn't quite work out

  • @thezipcreator

    @thezipcreator

    9 ай бұрын

    what? time is a dimension, there can't be "particles of time". like, there's not particles of the X Y and Z axes. time is the same as the other ones just with a sign flipped.

  • @MonkeyspankO
    @MonkeyspankO9 ай бұрын

    I'm actually very excited about this era of astrophysics we are/have been entering. Just when we thought we knew everything, we realize just how little we understand and hopefully start the journey to learn, well ... more. I know it sounds corny, but we're talking about some fundamental pieces of the puzzle here. Dare I say, practical applications?

  • @richardaversa7128
    @richardaversa71288 ай бұрын

    Another fabtastic episode. Does anyone know how to listen to the audio on the go? I wish PBS Spacetime would upload to Spotify.

  • @sciencegeekgrandpa8
    @sciencegeekgrandpa89 ай бұрын

    And then there's the most important problem of all: ENC (Emperor's New Clothes)--the problem caused by people forgetting that the only thing we have for certain is some observations that can't be explained, and that Dark Matter is just a hypothesis until some smart person can actually demonstrate the existence of the billions of particles that are supposed to be sheeting through us every second. Until then, it will remain the finest of fabric!

  • @StreakyBaconMan

    @StreakyBaconMan

    9 ай бұрын

    Dark matter isn't a hypothesis, it's merely what we call the source of the extra gravity we can observe out in the universe. What is a hypothesis is the potential explanations for what dark matter actually is - like dark matter being weakly interacting massive particles is a hypothesis that hasn't been demonstrated. But the fact that dark matter (unexplained sources of gravity) exists is not a hypothesis - you can run an experiment to confirm that unexplained sources of gravity do or do not exist, and we've done those experiments repeatedly and made the same observations that they do exist. That's just not a hypothesis anymore when you have that level of evidence.

  • @StreakyBaconMan

    @StreakyBaconMan

    9 ай бұрын

    @@palladium1083 Dark matter is just a name - it doesn't necessarily mean that it's matter. I think you're just getting hung up on the name of these phenomenon as though they are attempting to describe the cause of the phenomenon when it's simply a name for the phenomenon itself. In your head just replace the words "dark matter" with "unexplained source of gravity" and "dark energy" with "unexplained source of energy causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate". If you think scientists are ruling out the possibility that dark matter is something other than matter you're just wrong - plenty of scientific research has been done trying to offer alternate explanations for dark matter which don't involve it being matter, they are just less accurate at making predictions than the explanation that dark matter is some type of weakly interacting massive particle.

  • @J-A-A-K
    @J-A-A-K9 ай бұрын

    This video was extremely well written and presented for such a complex subject matter. Thank you!

  • @AlexanderGee
    @AlexanderGee9 ай бұрын

    Sidebar. Imagine if for april fools we could get a hitchhikers guide to the galaxy episode with Matt's actual galaxy facts and Journey of the Sorcerer for intro music.

  • @nortyfiner
    @nortyfiner9 ай бұрын

    The key to dark matter and dark energy, is to recognize that they're fudge factors we inserted into our flawed math to prop up the Lambda-CDM model. They probably don't exist as things in themselves; rather, they represent properties of spacetime that we don't yet understand, and won't until we can get our heads properly around quantum gravity.

  • @mandelbraught2728
    @mandelbraught27289 ай бұрын

    Great, I was just getting comfortable with our almost complete ignorance only to find out that, apparently, we knew less than we thought 🤣 jk, love this channel, many thanks as always to Matt and PBS!

  • @LuisSierra42

    @LuisSierra42

    9 ай бұрын

    We know absolutely nothing

  • @angelmendez-rivera351

    @angelmendez-rivera351

    9 ай бұрын

    @@LuisSierra42 This is false.

  • @cyrus8886
    @cyrus88869 ай бұрын

    Maybe dark matter was the friends we made along the way

  • @HupfderFloh
    @HupfderFloh9 ай бұрын

    0:49 it turns out that matter matters

  • @kailomonkey
    @kailomonkey9 ай бұрын

    To Big To Fail is such a meme naming

  • @xBINARYGODx
    @xBINARYGODx9 ай бұрын

    I demand you do an episode dedicated to the anti-science people that keep inundating the comments section with their drivel.

  • @xBINARYGODx

    @xBINARYGODx

    9 ай бұрын

    And I don't mean like the young-earth variety, some of these people seem rather scientistic until you mention DM or DE and then they throw the scie3ntic method out the windows and act no different the alt-fact-ers. Anyway, just watching this entire video silenced a lot of their (non-)points, but maybe a video directed at this nonsense would be helpful.

  • @thstroyur

    @thstroyur

    9 ай бұрын

    I haven't seen any one such "anti-sciencer" here; plenty of people critical of DM and how its research is conducted - but not a single call for the overthrow of science as such. As for the unnecessary dig at creationism, I'll have you know that most creationists with scientific degrees nowadays have probably put more thought on this than you ever did - you're just parrotting diatribes you were socially conditioned to - and ironically enough, you're likely to approach the arguments with the same closemindedness of the people you're criticizing here. Fundamentalism is not exclusive to religion, as so happens.

  • @erdngtn9942
    @erdngtn99429 ай бұрын

    I still think dark matter is time either moving faster or slower in different gravity wells. I won't be sold on the opposite.

  • @daveriddlelin9327

    @daveriddlelin9327

    9 ай бұрын

    That explains red shift source and cancels expansion.. electromagnetism is the force that rules the tiny.. it rules big too.. it's all misunderstood.. all models coming apart it seems big bang included

  • @patrickwumbo8271
    @patrickwumbo82718 ай бұрын

    Please cite the papers you mention/get the information from in the description, thx!

  • @Stellarcrete
    @Stellarcrete9 ай бұрын

    My theory is that dark matter is actually just normal matter that has it's wave function collapsed less frequently because it is in the cold darkness of deep space. Gravity also isn't a particle but a reduction in space expansion caused by the energy density of matter occupying a certain amount of space and therefore at the macro level gravity is a macro effect proportional to how much space is taken up by matter, which would mean uncollapsed wave functions have a stronger gravity than collapsed wave functions. This would help resolve the cusp-core problem, and also explain why gravity appears to travel at the same rate as light, because it's not that there is a graviton of zero mass travelling at the max speed of the universe, but in fact what we call the speed of light is actually the speed at which space grows.

  • @patton72010
    @patton720109 ай бұрын

    Love this channel. Was hoping for LK-99 video though.

  • @danmallery9142
    @danmallery91429 ай бұрын

    6:25 As the density increases, would it not begin to heat up and effect the cusp-core problem? (If anyone reacts to this post, please realize that I am not a scientist, so use small words. 🙂 )

  • @funpotatoman
    @funpotatoman9 ай бұрын

    I am chronically addicted to these videos

  • @davidbarkin8269
    @davidbarkin82699 ай бұрын

    Since there is no such things as dark matter and dark energy, you need a new theory of Gravity.

  • @Edgarbopp
    @Edgarbopp9 ай бұрын

    That was a roller coaster ride.

  • @Dagobah359
    @Dagobah3599 ай бұрын

    GR: The faster something's relative speed is, the higher the apparent mass. The length also contracts. (Assuming the CG is in/near the middle) When something is going fast enough that the apparent length is less than 2x the Schwarzschild radius of the apparent mass ... would it appear as a rapidly moving black hole?

  • @bungalowjuice7225
    @bungalowjuice72259 ай бұрын

    Regarding the inconsistency with supernova rich history and yet high dark matter in the middle could be that different galaxies simply have different amounts of dark matter

  • @Andrew-lo5sc
    @Andrew-lo5sc9 ай бұрын

    There's a part of gravitational waves I think people don't realize yet. On galactic scale there are massive ones that have dilated spacetime as long as the cores still exist. A standing wave that counters expansion. It would be part of the nature of dark matter and dark energy. A black hole is like a wave on expansion that has capped and crashed that surfs expansion itself now. Locked in that specific moment of time in expansion. It can slow expansion down by going faster but is ultimately aiding dark energy fine tune to the new time dilation. The fact we see time or motion is probably us witnessing dark matter reacting to matter in the first place. Our holographic reality is bent and contorted between gravitational waves and gravity. The only thing consistent in all cases is space acts like a physical body no matter what. I think the problem in models is the idea of gravity. Its actually doing something rather than just reacting to particles. Performing a function on a larger scale than matter itself.

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface9 ай бұрын

    As far as I know, star formation in galaxies fluctuates anyway, depending on the amount of gas available. Would it be possible to explain flat galaxy cores without much star formation by postulating that in those galaxies, all available gas is already absorbed into stars, while galaxies with much star formation but very dense cores just gobbled up a lot of gas, sparking a new wave of star formation, but they are too young yet to go supernova to have dragged out enough Dark matter for the galaxy core to become flat?

  • @wallysponagle2426
    @wallysponagle24269 ай бұрын

    Yes , Science is not Science without being questioned by opposition.

  • @wyattnoise
    @wyattnoise9 ай бұрын

    The fact we find so much dark matter in the center of galaxies, which we know exist around super-massive-black holes suggests the dark matter could simply be matter spilling into our universe through the black hole. It's matter from another universe.

  • @kittywampusdrums4963
    @kittywampusdrums49639 ай бұрын

    My wife's cooking turns into dark matter after she burns it on the stove every time.

  • @realmless4193
    @realmless41939 ай бұрын

    I was hoping this video would mention the role of magnetism in the formation of gas clouds and the secondary effect it would have on galactic structure through the gravity of said gas clouds, but I guess I must wait for another day before I see a serious discussion of the gravitational effects of intergalactic wind.

  • @pablocopello3592
    @pablocopello35929 ай бұрын

    2 different problems: 1.- How does DM behaves at a cosmic and galactic scale. 2.- What is the nature of DM. Of course they are related problems, but not the same. For problem 1, we want to model how DM distribution (densities) at a cosmological and galactic level evolve with time (what is the state equation?, does it follows standard GR Einstein equation? can be modeled as a deviation from standard GR Einstein eq.? For problem 2, we want to know if it is composed of quantum fields responding to QFT, if those fields can be explained thru gauge theories with some local symmetries, which are the particles of those fields and the properties of those particles, is DM composed of quantum fields? can its nature even be modeled within the quantum framework?? Problem 1: progress is possible in a medium term with the new telescopes etc. Problem 2: I do not think it can be solved until we make compatible the quantum framework with the classical framework (needed also to unify gravity with QM).

  • @sermah
    @sermah9 ай бұрын

    Scientists whenever they encounter a slightest inconvenience: - I shall call it "A too-minor-to-solve problem".

  • @vicentecastro7148
    @vicentecastro71489 ай бұрын

    This is so informative..tnx Man😁

  • @solovoldo
    @solovoldo9 ай бұрын

    It's just the remnants of dead matter that lost all form of energy. Just like fire leaves behind soot. That's why we're expanding. As more matter is brought in, just as much is left behind, filling the empty voids of space. It's possibly quite literally the smallest form of particle in existence, thus why we can't seem to observe it directly. Nothing lasts forever, nor does it simply just disappear.

  • @Demobius
    @Demobius8 ай бұрын

    I recall an observation of a post-galactic collision where both galaxies lost their CDM, which formed separate clouds, detected by gravitational lensing. This was interpreted as evidence that CDM does not interact with itself. It also eliminates MOND as an explanation of the observation.

  • @effectingcause5484

    @effectingcause5484

    8 ай бұрын

    You speak of the Bullet cluster?

  • @IamPoob
    @IamPoob9 ай бұрын

    is it possible for the "observer effect" to have occurred in the early universe? I was thinking that a correlation of entangled particles 'observed itself' by accidentally defining the parameters of the Planck mass. is something like that possible?

  • @projectarduino2295
    @projectarduino22959 ай бұрын

    Hey, I don’t know if you do requests, but I was thinking. I don’t know a lot about quantum physics, but I had a thought experiment: Suppose you have a particle and an antiparticle at rest. They annihilate, and conserving momentum, the photons now carrying momentum should sum to a net zero, so a radiating distribution summing to zero. But now suppose the two particles are at some velocity, there exists some direction of momentum, so when the particles annihilate, the photons summed should maintain that momentum, so their distribution should be biased to compensate. How does a particle “know” how to compensate? Is this even how it works? What does the energy release look like? If you think of a spherical surface around the particles, the photons escape radially through it after annihilation. If measuring the intensity of each photon as it passes through this surface, and there exists some variance of distribution, does this simply exist because of some reference frame shenanigans? TLDR: Sorry if this is a bit of a ramble, but I was just curious about the exact mechanics of particle-antiparticle annihilation at velocities and what the emissions as photons would look like in the absence of any other matter to absorb momentum.

  • @garethdean6382

    @garethdean6382

    8 ай бұрын

    This is something we've tested. When two particles annihilate they nearly always produce a pair of photons (which are their own antiparticles) moving in opposite directions. These carry equal and opposite momentum, spin and the like. For a MOVING pair of particles the same thing happens, but the two photons will not be equal; one will have more energy, more momentum than the other. It will be 'bluer'. Now, if we begin moving away from the bluer photon and towards the redder one we'll see the bluer one redshift and the red one blueshift, at some point they'll become equal. What point is this? When we're moving as fast as the annihilated particles were, on average. When the particles would have been still from our viewpoint, both photons will look identical!

  • @aceofdatabase
    @aceofdatabase9 ай бұрын

    Excellent as always!