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Triton Station

Triton Station
A Blog About the Science and Sociology of Cosmology and Dark Matter
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Dark MatterData InterpretationLCDMMONDParticle PhysicsFiziksel Bilimlerİngilizce
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Some people have asked me to comment on the Scientific American article What if We Never Find Dark Matter? by Slatyer & Tait. For the most part, I find it unobjectionable – from a certain point of view. It is revealing to examine this point of view, starting with the title, which frames the subject … Continue reading What if we never find dark matter?

CosmologyPersonal ExperienceSociologyFiziksel Bilimlerİngilizce
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The time is approaching when Nobel prizes are awarded. This inevitably leads to a lot of speculation and chattering rumor. Last year one publication, I think it was Physics Today, went so far as to publish a list of things various people thought should be recognized.

CosmologyDark MatterMONDPhilosophy Of ScienceSociologyFiziksel Bilimlerİngilizce
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Given recent developments in the long-running hunt for dark matter and the difficulty interpreting what this means, it seems like a good juncture to re-up* this: The history of science is a decision tree. Vertices appear where we must take one or another branching. Sometimes, we take the wrong road for the right reasons. A … Continue reading Decision Trees &

Dark MatterData InterpretationLCDMMONDPhilosophy Of ScienceFiziksel Bilimlerİngilizce
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I want to take another step back in perspective from the last post to say a few words about what the radial acceleration relation (RAR) means and what it doesn’t mean. Here it is again: This information was not available when the dark matter paradigm was developed. We observed excess motion, like flat rotation curves, … Continue reading Why’d it have to be MOND?

Dark MatterLaws Of NatureStellar PopulationsFiziksel Bilimlerİngilizce
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Flat rotation curves and the Baryonic Tully-Fisher relation (BTFR) both follow from the Radial Acceleration Relation (RAR). In Mistele et al. (2024b) we emphasize the exciting aspects of the former; these follow from the RAR in the Mistele et al. (2024a). It is worth understanding the connection.