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by kamaal
5038 days ago
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Oh well, That question really has far reaching implications. Because if we say Science is what we observe and describe as per our interpretations of logic(And the language of logic - 'Math') then our science is really broken. Because what we can observe doesn't often turn out to be true and what is true is not often observed. Because look at it this way. We are now saying Dark Matter doesn't interact anyway with light nor something else. Hence observing, detecting or modeling them out through conjectures manufactured through thin air is nothing more than what religion was some centuries ago. Anything unexplainable was attributed to some form of divinity in times before. We know it exists, but we can't show you, can't explain you what it is, how it looks is the text book definition of god throughout centuries. |
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(A slightly better example comes from quantum mechanics. In the "Schrodinger picture" there is a "wavefunction of the universe" which changes from moment to moment, while the definitions of space and momentum stay the same. In the "Heisenberg picture" the wavefunction stays the same while the definitions of space and momentum change. You would think there would be an ontological difference to the question, "is the state of the universe different from the state of the big bang?" but, in fact, on this description there is no observable difference, and science could never settle the question.)
This does not reduce science to a religion; science simply studies the observable differences and must be content with not knowing everything -- which most scientists are already content with, since they have to deal with matters of uncertainty and the distinctions between correlations and causations.
Dark Matter does interact with other things, but it does so indirectly, because it has mass and therefore warps spacetime. This is not actually the first use of gravitational lensing to observe dark matter; in fact, earlier it had been used to settle the question of whether dark matter felt any electromagnetic force at all, by looking at galaxy collisions. The prediction would be that the dark matter clouds of two galaxies would more or less "go through each other" in a collision while the luminous stuff would "bump into each other". This was observed as early as 6 years ago, see http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2006/1e0657/ .
We certainly can show you, and we can explain to you what it is. The only problem is the same problem that neutrinos have: it's just very hard to detect these particles because they don't have an electric charge and therefore don't care about the electrons which make all the rest of chemistry happen. Our best tool for understanding dark matter is still gravity; its a force which we know the dark matter feels.