by galaxy12 » Fri Feb 16, 2024 1:56 pm
As I showed in a previous thread, when an ion travels through space, it creates a magnetic field. The faster a particle travels, the greater its magnetic field. In a rotating galaxy, the ions/particles in the spiral arms that are located in the periphery rotate faster than particles closer to the center. Therefore, ions in the periphery will produce a greater magnetic field. Electrons will be pushed from the lower magnetic field toward the higher magnetic field. The magnetic field of the spiral arms will hold them together, causing them to rotate as a single structure. The magnetic force explains why galaxies are able to rotate faster than expected without flying apart. There is no need for dark matter or MOND.
As I showed in a previous thread, when an ion travels through space, it creates a magnetic field. The faster a particle travels, the greater its magnetic field. In a rotating galaxy, the ions/particles in the spiral arms that are located in the periphery rotate faster than particles closer to the center. Therefore, ions in the periphery will produce a greater magnetic field. Electrons will be pushed from the lower magnetic field toward the higher magnetic field. The magnetic field of the spiral arms will hold them together, causing them to rotate as a single structure. The magnetic force explains why galaxies are able to rotate faster than expected without flying apart. There is no need for dark matter or MOND.
[img]https://i.postimg.cc/6q12JdP7/rotation-in-magnetic-field-explanation2.png[/img]
[img]https://i.postimg.cc/43TKg4W1/galaxy-rotation-electron-generation-explanation-2.png[/img]