Evidence emerges for dark-matter free galaxies

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BeAChooser
Posts: 1075
Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2015 2:24 am

Evidence emerges for dark-matter free galaxies

Unread post by BeAChooser » Mon Dec 06, 2021 9:10 pm

https://phys.org/news/2021-12-evidence- ... axies.html
Evidence emerges for dark-matter free galaxies

An international team of astronomers led by researchers from the Netherlands has found no trace of dark matter in the galaxy AGC 114905, despite taking detailed measurements over a course of forty hours with state-of-the-art telescopes.
Oooooo ... that can't be welcome news for gnome believers.
When Pavel Mancera Piña (University of Groningen and ASTRON, the Netherlands) and his colleagues discovered six galaxies with little to no dark matter, they were told "measure again, you'll see that there will be dark matter around your galaxy". However, after forty hours of detailed observations using the Very Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico (United States), the evidence for a dark matter-free galaxy only became stronger.

The galaxy in question, AGC 114905, is about 250 million light-years away. It is classified as an ultra-diffuse dwarf galaxy, with the name 'dwarf galaxy' referring to its luminosity and not to its size. The galaxy is about the size of our own Milky Way but contains a thousand times fewer stars. The prevailing idea is that all galaxies, and certainly ultra-diffuse dwarf galaxies, can only exist if they are held together by dark matter.
Oh my ... and it gets even weirder ...
The researchers collected data on the rotation of gas in AGC 114905 for 40 hours between July and October 2020 using the VLA telescope. Subsequently, they made a graph showing the distance of the gas from the center of the galaxy on the x-axis and the rotation speed of the gas on the y-axis. This is a standard way to reveal the presence of dark matter. The graph shows that the motions of the gas in AGC 114905 can be completely explained by just normal matter.

"This is, of course, what we thought and hoped for because it confirms our previous measurements," says Pavel Mancera Piña. "But now the problem remains that the theory predicts that there must be dark matter in AGC 114905, but our observations say there isn't. In fact, the difference between theory and observation is only getting bigger."
Surely there must be a reason gnomish theories aren't working ...
In their scientific publication, the researchers list the possible explanations for the lack of dark matter one by one. For example, AGC 114905 could have been stripped of dark matter by large nearby galaxies. Mancera Piña: "But there are none. And in the most reputed galaxy formation framework, the so called cold dark matter model, we would have to introduce extreme parameter values that are far beyond the usual range. Also with modified Newtonian dynamics, an alternative theory to cold dark matter, we cannot reproduce the motions of the gas within the galaxy."
So where's this leave them? Looking for another gnome, I imagine. :roll:

Aardwolf
Posts: 1457
Joined: Tue Jul 28, 2009 2:56 pm

Re: Evidence emerges for dark-matter free galaxies

Unread post by Aardwolf » Tue Dec 07, 2021 8:15 pm

BeAChooser wrote: Mon Dec 06, 2021 9:10 pmSo where's this leave them?
Obviously they will say dark matter doesn't interact with this type of gas. After all this is a religion, not science, and cannot be falsified.

BeAChooser
Posts: 1075
Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2015 2:24 am

Re: Evidence emerges for dark-matter free galaxies

Unread post by BeAChooser » Fri Dec 10, 2021 4:50 am

Guess this really is a big deal!

https://www.popsci.com/science/galaxy-m ... rk-matter/
“In our current understanding of galaxy formation, and evolution, galaxies form in the center of very massive dark matter halos,” says Pavel Mancera Piña, an astronomer at the University of Groningen and the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (ASTRON) who led a recent project studying an “ultra-diffuse” galaxy called AGC 114905, to be published in the scientific journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. These dark matter halos accrete in space and help pull the galaxies together, Mancera Piña says. 

That’s why it was so surprising when Mancera Piña and his team found a galaxy that they think could have formed without dark matter.

For the last few years he has been studying what are called ultra-diffuse galaxies. These galaxies, though they are about the same size as the Milky Way, have only about a thousandth of the stars. The strung-out galaxies are fainter, so astronomers hadn’t been able to observe many of them until recent advances in telescope technology, he says. But experts still don’t know how these galaxies, which have much less mass than typical galaxies, form.

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