General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Joe Scott
comments
Comments by "" (@jmitterii2) on "The Fringe Theory That Could Disprove Dark Matter | Answers With Joe" video.
@maxsteele3686 This hypothesis is stating that dark matter doesn't exist, rather it's a product of virtual products causing inertia to act in a way that allows galaxies to rotate at a constant speed throughout. But that's not the only observation that incites some extra mass that we currently label as dark matter. So what about the gravitational lensing that is observed that would demonstrate there's some sort of mass? Virtual particles aren't as described in this video, those are actual particles. Virtual particles literally don't exist for enough time to exist at all. Only pressure force in the Casimir effect is created. And its not mass like nor gravitational. Rather, it's just a pressure force that's mostly equal throughout space. So again, what about the gravitational lensing effect observed about the halo of galaxies, and specifically about the halo of colliding galaxies as lensing appears on the opposite sides of bother galaxies as if the "dark matter" halos kept going?
1
Dark matter proposition doesn't just come from the fact the galaxy rotations are equal throughout, but also gravitational lensing is observed around galaxies about a halo like effect including galaxies that have collided, the gravitational lensing effects in those instances are outside the galaxies at opposite direction of the collisions of the two galaxies. As if the halo of "dark" matter doesn't interact that much even with other dark matter passing through the two large clumps that were around the two galaxies, while regular matter of the galaxies begin immediate interaction. So gravitational lensing that is observed needs to be explained by any other hypothesis too. Dark matter really appears to be more than just a confusion physics on a larger scale. Curious if that QI can explain this gravitational lensing "halo" effect of what we currently label dark matter halos.
1