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by othermaciej
5533 days ago
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We know two things about dark matter:
- It doesn't interact electromagnetically.
- It does interact gravitationally and produces extra gravitational attraction beyond the electromagnetically interacting matter we know about.
- It is dispersed throughout galaxies. The first property rules out baryonic antimatter as dark matter, since that would interact electromagnetically. The last two properties rule out anything that has a repulsive gravitational interaction as dark matter. |
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while we don't know whether it exists at all. Whatever phenomena are explained by DM are also easy explained by molecular hydrogen (i.e H2) which is almost not detectable. [The hydrogen we know about in the space is atomic - H, and there should be orders of magnitude more of molecular one than atomic when you have atomic at such interstellar space conditions]