Major Updates About Bizarre Galaxies Without Dark Matter
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Top Comments (10)
Science gives us an endless stream of new questions. Anton does a wonderful job of sharing this with us. Thank you, sir.
Hi! I’m Michael Keim, the author of the new paper on DF9, the third galaxy missing dark matter. I’m so glad you enjoyed my work! Your video was an excellent review. It was especially satisfying because I myself had originally argued in our 2022 Nature paper that DF9 was part of the trail despite being misidentified in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey as a quasar in the far distant universe (I even had the chance to name it, but replied too late to an email—haha). So discovering that it’s actually the third galaxy without dark matter is the perfect way to wrap up my PhD. Our universe is an incredibly beautiful place. One of the best things about astrophysics is how much there still is to discover.
In a visible universe large enough (and it is IMHO), the most improbable things will exist, we just need to find them to learn more.
We have some very dark matters to discuss
The normal Galaxy has invisible magic dust that holds it together. An abnormal Galaxy just has gravity.
👽#1 - "What's that gizmo? 👽#2 - "It's an interstellar flummoxer." 👽#1 - "What does it do?" 👽#2 - "It screws with the instruments, telescopes & probes of primitive planets. Here, I'm pointing mine at earth." 👽#1 - "I didn't see it do anything." 👽#2 - "Well, now they think our entire galaxy, and a few others, have no dark matter. Cool, huh?" 👽#1 - [sigh] "I bet you were the kind of kid who fried ants with a magnifying glass."
Which would imply there were galaxies created of practically all dark matter traveling the Universe sometimes battering galaxies with a powerful gravity cyclone that has no detectable source. I call dibs for naming this phenomena Spectral Warp Storms.
nature: "You know nothing John Snow."
alternative theory: galactic housekeeping
The first thing that came to mind when I heard about those galaxies was an ancient “bullet cluster”
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Top Comments (10)
Science gives us an endless stream of new questions. Anton does a wonderful job of sharing this with us. Thank you, sir.
Hi! I’m Michael Keim, the author of the new paper on DF9, the third galaxy missing dark matter. I’m so glad you enjoyed my work! Your video was an excellent review. It was especially satisfying because I myself had originally argued in our 2022 Nature paper that DF9 was part of the trail despite being misidentified in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey as a quasar in the far distant universe (I even had the chance to name it, but replied too late to an email—haha). So discovering that it’s actually the third galaxy without dark matter is the perfect way to wrap up my PhD. Our universe is an incredibly beautiful place. One of the best things about astrophysics is how much there still is to discover.
In a visible universe large enough (and it is IMHO), the most improbable things will exist, we just need to find them to learn more.
We have some very dark matters to discuss
The normal Galaxy has invisible magic dust that holds it together. An abnormal Galaxy just has gravity.
👽#1 - "What's that gizmo? 👽#2 - "It's an interstellar flummoxer." 👽#1 - "What does it do?" 👽#2 - "It screws with the instruments, telescopes & probes of primitive planets. Here, I'm pointing mine at earth." 👽#1 - "I didn't see it do anything." 👽#2 - "Well, now they think our entire galaxy, and a few others, have no dark matter. Cool, huh?" 👽#1 - [sigh] "I bet you were the kind of kid who fried ants with a magnifying glass."
Which would imply there were galaxies created of practically all dark matter traveling the Universe sometimes battering galaxies with a powerful gravity cyclone that has no detectable source. I call dibs for naming this phenomena Spectral Warp Storms.
nature: "You know nothing John Snow."
alternative theory: galactic housekeeping
The first thing that came to mind when I heard about those galaxies was an ancient “bullet cluster”