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originally posted by: BlackProjects
THis article caught my attention. I have heard and read of similar matters at CERN. Had not heard a mention of Oak Ridge.
www.yahoo.com...
I did like the "Stranger things Season 4". In it the government opens a parallel universe which lets various nasties into out world. In the small town of Hawkins it is up to a handful of kids to save the world.
On November 6, 1983, during an experiment hosted at Hawkins National Laboratory, a child test subject named Eleven made inter-dimensional contact with a Demogorgon and unintentionally opened a Gate into the Upside Down. Through this gateway, the Mind Flayer began using its dominion over the Upside Down to invade the town of Hawkins, spreading toxic biological matter, presumably with the goal to eventually invade the entire Earth. However, this plan was stopped when the Gate was closed, supposedly severing the dimension's connection to Earth's dimension.
originally posted by: BlackProjects
I did like the "Stranger things Season 4". In it the government opens a parallel universe which lets various nasties into out world. In the small town of Hawkins it is up to a handful of kids to save the world.
I'm impressed you didn't copy the click-baity title. Your choice of thread title suggests you actually may have read the article, good job!
originally posted by: BlackProjects
THis article caught my attention. I have heard and read of similar matters at CERN. Had not heard a mention of Oak Ridge.
www.yahoo.com...
Close but not exactly accurate.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: beyondknowledge
Only 5% of the universe is currently visible with our detection methods and comprises all the stars, planets, and galaxies that can be seen.
We may very well be the anomaly, for all we know the other 95% of the universe could be teeming with life that we simply cannot detect.
Baryonic dark matter may occur in non-luminous gas or in Massive Astrophysical Compact Halo Objects (MACHOs) – condensed objects such as black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs, very faint stars, or non-luminous objects like planets and brown dwarfs.
As just stated, the earth would not be visible if it was in another galaxy, so it technically is part of the 85% of "dark matter" called "baryonic dark matter" and is not in another dimension or parallel reality. But we just don't know what most of the 85% is (85% is approximately the dark matter portion of dark matter plus atoms, ignoring dark energy.)
originally posted by: beyondknowledge
Over 85% of the mater in the universe is not visible? Does that mean there are seven parallel realities? That is assuming they are all the same size and mass.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: beyondknowledge
Only 5% of the universe is currently visible with our detection methods and comprises all the stars, planets, and galaxies that can be seen.
We may very well be the anomaly, for all we know the other 95% of the universe could be teeming with life that we simply cannot detect.
originally posted by: cooperton
The other 95% may very well not exist at all. Dark matter/energy is a theory that allows our equations to work outside our solar system. Imagine if you were 2,000% wrong on an answer, so you made up 20x more matter in the universe to make it right. We've been looking for almost 100 years and still haven't found it.
originally posted by: ErosA433
What we have been doing in realty is checking our models against newer observations with better tools and technology, allowing us to view the universe through out all parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, and we have found more and more compelling evidence that our understanding of gravity via GR is correct.
We have in a manner of speaking simply got more and more compelling evidence that dark matter exists, is particulate in nature and only interacts gravitationally and only via the weak force coupling to matter...
I wish people would stop with the throw away comment that its just made up or a fudge factor... its quite an ignorant examination of what is a lot of very compelling, cross comparable and logically constant findings in a lot of data.
originally posted by: ErosA433
a reply to: Phantom423
the 1/r2 relation is unfortunately a cruel mistress and the point is that when we look at another star, we simply don't detect enough light reflecting off of a planet to really see it above the background that is the host star. Now there are special circumstances when a planet passes in front of its host star creating a shadow and the luminosity will appear to dip but thats not what we are talking about.
Basically in the context of dark matter, any normal matter, is predominantly considered luminous matter that is everything we know, and in an astronomical context means stars... since stars are so much heavier than the rest of their planets.
In the model there will be a correction for non luminous material such as gas clouds, planets, blackholes etc, but it is not enough to explain so called dark matter