AI is on the hunt for dark matter

Oct 11, 2024
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According to classical physics, the electrons should rotate uniformly at what is called the cyclotron frequency, the frequency adopted by a charged particle moving through a magnetic field. Remarkably, what the researchers discovered is that in fact, depending on the quantum number describing the angular momentum, the electrons rotated in three different ways with zero frequency, the cyclotron frequency, and the Larmor frequency, which is half the cyclotron frequency. This shows that the rotational dynamics of the electrons are more complex and intriguing than was once believed.

 
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"Galaxies, on the other hand, will sail on through, rarely actually "colliding" in the way you may think because of the large spaces within stars and other objects within them."

Is that correct? I was under the impression that galaxies that "collide" will "merge" instead of "pass through each other".

Yes, few stars will actually collide with each other, but the billions-body gravitational interaction will definitely affect the trajectories of the stars in both galaxies.

And, if the gas has a substantial fraction of the galaxies' masses, then the stars and central black holes will be gravitationally attracted to that, too.

So, what exactly is expected to just "pass through" other than maybe the "dark matter" and only if it has a low enough cross section for self interaction?
 
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jhixon, you have posted that same erroneous material in several threads here on the Space.com forum.

Since you seem to believe what you are posting, please explain how you think regular electrons can be "dark" out in space. Remember, the electrons in these links that you post are just plain electrons like what flows through our household wiring, not some new type of particle. And, they are "dark" inside some arrangements of atoms in crystalline structures, not when they are unbound in space.

So, please explain how you think they can account for "dark matter" that is hypothesized to exist in space.
 
Oct 11, 2024
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Dark matter doesn't exist, it's only speculated. It was only speculated because scientists couldn't see enough matter to create gravity so they made up a name.

Dark electrons are real, factual and I posted several articles talking about the three different movements and strange behavior under super cool conditions, which is why NASA built a cold station to begin with because the Quantum laboratory in Japan started making discoveries about electrons. Obviously celestial bodies can entangle electrons with electromagnetism, so electrons can be entangled, unified entanglement of dark electrons. Many people believe that gravity works from the energy of the planet displacing space and nothing to do with mass or matter. FYI...matter is energy.

A new study by astrophysicist Richard Lieu proposes that gravity can exist without mass, challenging the centuries-old notion that mass is necessary for gravity. This theory suggests thin, shell-like layers of "topological defects" may give rise to gravity without any underlying mass, potentially eliminating the need for dark matter.
 
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