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The implication is that there may be significantly less dark matter in the Milky Way than previously estimated. From [0]: “Using this newly derived rotation curve, a new mass was deduced for our Milky Way. And surprise... it is much lighter. It is now estimated to be only two hundred billion times that of the Sun (~2.06 x 10^11), so about four to five times lower than the previous estimates. The amount of ordinary matter did not change, thus, there must be a lot less dark matter in the Milky Way than previously thought. The new expectation is that the ordinary matter like stars and gas in the Milky Way now makes up about 1/3 of the Milky Way mass and the other 2/3 are accounted to dark matter.” [0] https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/iow_20230927 |
Is it possible that another turn of the crank or two takes dark matter to zero?
Dark matter has always had that string theory vibe: yeah, maybe it sounds ridiculous but it’s the only game in town man.