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by oshepherd
3221 days ago
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> It is interesting that those who are looking experimentally for both dark matter and dark energy have come up empty in every experiment so far performed. Given that <1% of the dark matter search space has been covered, this is an entirely unsurprising result. The ΛCDM model doesn't come out of theory, it comes out of observation - the only thing we can make fit our observations of the universe is cold dark matter (and a cosmological constant, aka dark energy) The thing a lot of people don't seem to get is that astronomers hate¹ dark energy and dark matter - they're really quite inelegant - but nothing else fits. Every other attempt (and lots and lots of time and energy have been spent on this) to explain our observations without hypothesising the existence of a lot of weakly interacting matter out there (e.g. MOND) has failed to match them ¹ In much the same way physicists dislike the standard model in all of its' ugliness - even though it works |
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Oh yeah, this seems to fix the theory to now match observation.
The observations do not require dark energy or dark matter to fix things. It is the interpretation of those observations via the theory that requires these entities.
Observations are theory neutral. It should be fun to try an come up with a good model/theory and if new observations break the theory, then it should be more fun to see what is a better explanation.
For many, many years, I have watched very intelligent people get emotionally caught up in defending their theories and models, when it should be a case of just moving on. They just don't make it fun.