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RE: Dark blobs as stealthy dark matter

in #steemstem6 years ago

I have a very ill-defined (and unimplementable) idea in my head now that takes advantage of this.

Imagine a device which emits a strong repulsive force sitting at the bottom of a large gravity well. Would this act as a sort of 'dark matter concentrator'?

Also, it's curious that dark matter appear to interact just fine with non-dark matter gravitationally. Is there some explanation for this, or am I missing something?

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Imagine a device which emits a strong repulsive force sitting at the bottom of a large gravity well. Would this act as a sort of 'dark matter concentrator'?

It depends whether dark matter interacts with the device at all. Why would it do it?

Also, it's curious that dark matter appear to interact just fine with non-dark matter gravitationally. Is there some explanation for this, or am I missing something?

Gravitational interactions are fine, but negligible compared to the rest as the masses are way too small for what concern the scales of interest.

It depends whether dark matter interacts with the device at all. Why would it do it?

I worded it poorly and probably should draw a free body diagram. The point is exactly that the dark matter won't interact with our 'generically repulsive' device, but will be affected by the gravity well. So, you've got both types of matter 'falling' towards the device, but normal matter is getting spit out due to the repulsive force, so dark matter accumulates.

Gravitational interactions are fine, but negligible compared to the rest as the masses are way too small for what concern the scales of interest.

What I'm getting at is why does dark matter interact gravitationally?

There are theories in which dark matter can be captured, for instance, by neutron stars. This would be very similar to this device. For instance, see here.

What I'm getting at is why does dark matter interact gravitationally?

This is the original reason behind dark matter: we need it to explain the galaxy rotation curves so that it must interact gravitationally. Otherwise, thus would just be other exotic stuff that would probably be called by another name.

Heh, the neutron star idea is sort of what I was working up to (I was thinking within jets from similar). So I'm sad at not being original, but happy that someone more well-versed though similarly.

As to the other topic, I'm aware that dark matter was proposed to explain galaxy rotation curves. Is there any idea as to why it interacts gravitationally, or is that still along the lines of 'because it does,b y definition'?

Well, you question may somehow be: how gravity works at the most fundamental level. And the answer is: "we don't know yet, but some are working on it" :)

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