Perhaps they partially exist on a nearby plane of deep gravity that does not directly interact with our universe. That would mean that gravity has much longer range than previously assumed. Maybe the force they emit as "dark energy" is not congruous with normal matter.
Such a revelation whould show that we really don't understand gravity...
2007-08-01
15:20:00
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3 answers
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asked by
sassychickensuckerboy
4
in
Science & Mathematics
➔ Astronomy & Space
I heard that maybe "dark matter does not interact" with normal matter. But couldn't it still come from stars and galaxies? Perhaps it is emanating into another dimension from the stars...
2007-08-01
18:52:32 ·
update #1
The main idea here is that the star is like the tip of the iceberg with dark matter/energy below in the depths beyond the reach of normal space...
2007-08-01
18:56:49 ·
update #2