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Full Version: 5. What is cold dark matter?
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All stars and galaxies in the sky amount to less than 0.5% of all mass in the universe.

The rest is cold dark matter and dark energy.
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http://www.sciam.com/gallery_directory.cfm

"Dark Matter Clumps"
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...Is the dark matter in the universe made of the same stuff that we are familiar with on Earth, i.e., baryonic? Or is it some strange and exotic new material, i.e., nonbaryonic?
rhymer
some words on such here
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The Nature of Dark Matter

Neutrinos are tiny particles that make up a small portion of dark matter. They are very small and light and rarely interact with normal matter. Neutrinos are produced in nuclear processes in stars, so they are constantly being flung out along with light and the solar wind. At this moment millions of neutrinos from our sun are passing right through your body, but since they have no electric charge and much less mass than an electron they have no effect on you.
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http://www.newscientist.com/channel/space/mg18524911.600

....5 Dark matter

TAKE our best understanding of gravity, apply it to the way galaxies spin, and you'll quickly see the problem: the galaxies should be falling apart. Galactic matter orbits around a central point because its mutual gravitational attraction creates centripetal forces. But there is not enough mass in the galaxies to produce the observed spin.

Vera Rubin, an astronomer working at the Carnegie Institution's department of terrestrial magnetism in Washington DC, spotted this anomaly in the late 1970s. The best response from physicists was to suggest there is more stuff out there than we can see. The trouble was, nobody could explain what this "dark matter" was.

And they still can't. Although researchers have made many suggestions about what kind of particles might make up dark matter, there is no consensus. It's an embarrassing hole in our understanding. Astronomical observations suggest that dark matter must make up about 90 per cent of the mass in the universe, yet we are astonishingly ignorant what that 90 per cent is.

Maybe we can't work out what dark matter is because it doesn't actually exist. That's certainly the way Rubin would like it to turn out. "If I could have my pick, I would like to learn that Newton's laws must be modified in order to correctly describe gravitational interactions at large distances," she says. "That's more appealing than a universe filled with a new kind of sub-nuclear particle."....

Thanks for the link, Rick.
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http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/mi...gas.html?222005


Missing matter could be cloud of gas....
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http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/da...map.html?612005

Map of Dark Matter Developed....
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Is Dark Matter just the planets?

Just like gravity has it's anti-gravity, so does matter have supersymmetric particles. Its what makes up dark matter, replicas (mirror versions) of particles.
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Discovered by Vera Rubin, I believe, while studying the speed at which stars on the outermost wisps of galaxies rotated around the center.
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Substructures in cold dark matter haloes - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society - Volume 348 Issue 1 Page 333 - February 2004


http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/links/doi...4.07372.x/full/
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WHIM ---- > warm-hot intergalactic matter < ---- has been detected in our neighborhood!?
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....but the lack of definitive evidence for WHIM outside our immediate cosmic neighborhood made any estimates of the universal mass-density of baryons unreliable....
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http://www.fnal.gov/pub/inquiring/physics/...darkmatter.html
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