- #1
sirchick
- 51
- 0
Hello
I have a question (well its 2 questions)... I'm not hugely knowledged on the subject so i tend to question things in a more ignorant way but i wanted to know two things:
Firstly, how do astronomers weight a galaxy at an accurate level to be confident enough to say there is more stuff that is invisible to us (dark matter) than what we visibly see? How is it done and done accurately that we can be confident on that?
Secondly, with this invisible matter aka dark matter that we cannot see... is it possible that due to the billions of light sources throughout the universe, light phase cancellation causes the matter to go dark...so really its ordinary matter but we cannot see it because the light is canceled out by other light sources ?
I have a question (well its 2 questions)... I'm not hugely knowledged on the subject so i tend to question things in a more ignorant way but i wanted to know two things:
Firstly, how do astronomers weight a galaxy at an accurate level to be confident enough to say there is more stuff that is invisible to us (dark matter) than what we visibly see? How is it done and done accurately that we can be confident on that?
Secondly, with this invisible matter aka dark matter that we cannot see... is it possible that due to the billions of light sources throughout the universe, light phase cancellation causes the matter to go dark...so really its ordinary matter but we cannot see it because the light is canceled out by other light sources ?