- #36
matt.o
- 390
- 0
Whenever someone brings up MOND, I always like to post a link to this paper;
"Direct constraints on the dark matter self-interaction cross-section from the merging galaxy cluster 1E0657-56"
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0309303"
The basic gist is the comparison of a Chandra x-ray image and a lensing map of the "bullet cluster". The MOND people agree that the majority of baryonic matter in a cluster is in the intra-cluster medium , so this begs the question; Why do we see a lensing map consisitent with the majority of the mass being offset from the gas in the merging subcluster? Interestingly, mass contours overlay an optically detected galaxy overdensity, presumably the infalling cluster galaxies, which lies in front of the gas which has been ram-pressure stripped from the galaxies by its interaction with the main cluster gas (the galaxies are collisionless). Fair evidence against MOND?
"Direct constraints on the dark matter self-interaction cross-section from the merging galaxy cluster 1E0657-56"
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0309303"
The basic gist is the comparison of a Chandra x-ray image and a lensing map of the "bullet cluster". The MOND people agree that the majority of baryonic matter in a cluster is in the intra-cluster medium , so this begs the question; Why do we see a lensing map consisitent with the majority of the mass being offset from the gas in the merging subcluster? Interestingly, mass contours overlay an optically detected galaxy overdensity, presumably the infalling cluster galaxies, which lies in front of the gas which has been ram-pressure stripped from the galaxies by its interaction with the main cluster gas (the galaxies are collisionless). Fair evidence against MOND?
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