For Billy. :)

https://www.wired.com/2017/01/case-dark-matter/

The Man Who’s Trying to Kill Dark Matter
Sponsored by 36 Commuting Solutions Carpool Buddies Wanted. See More

The Dutch theoretical physicist Erik Verlinde argues that dark matter does not 
exist.Ilvy Njiokiktjien/Quanta Magazine
For 80 years, scientists have puzzled over the way galaxies and other cosmic 
structures appear to gravitate toward something they cannot see. This 
hypothetical “dark matter” seems to outweigh all visible matter by a startling 
ratio of five to one, suggesting that we barely know our own universe. 
Thousands of physicists are doggedly searching for these invisible particles.

Quanta Magazine


About

Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine, an editorially 
independent division of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance 
public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in 
mathematics and the physical and life sciences

But the dark matter hypothesis assumes scientists know how matter in the sky 
ought to move in the first place. At the end of 2016, a series of developments 
has revived a long-disfavored argument that dark matter doesn’t exist after 
all. In this view, no missing matter is needed to explain the errant motions of 
the heavenly bodies; rather, on cosmic scales, gravity itself works in a 
different way than either Isaac Newton or Albert Einstein predicted.

The latest attempt to explain away dark matter is a much-discussed proposal by 
Erik Verlinde, a theoretical physicist at the University of Amsterdam who is 
known for bold and prescient, if sometimes imperfect, ideas. In a dense 51-page 
paper posted online on Nov. 7, Verlinde casts gravity as a byproduct of quantum 
interactions and suggests that the extra gravity attributed to dark matter is 
an effect of “dark energy”—the background energy woven into the space-time 
fabric of the universe.

Instead of hordes of invisible particles, “dark matter is an interplay between 
ordinary matter and dark energy,” Verlinde said.

To make his case, Verlinde has adopted a radical perspective on the origin of 
gravity that is currently in vogue among leading theoretical physicists. 
Einstein defined gravity as the effect of curves in space-time created by the 
presence of matter. According to the new approach, gravity is an emergent 
phenomenon. Space-time and the matter within it are treated as a hologram that 
arises from an underlying network of quantum bits (called “qubits”), much as 
the three-dimensional environment of a computer game is encoded in classical 
bits on a silicon chip. Working within this framework, Verlinde traces dark 
energy to a property of these underlying qubits that supposedly encode the 
universe. On large scales in the hologram, he argues, dark energy interacts 
with matter in just the right way to create the illusion of dark matter.

In his calculations, Verlinde rediscovered the equations of “modified Newtonian 
dynamics,” or MOND. This 30-year-old theory makes an ad hoc tweak to the famous 
“inverse-square” law of gravity in Newton’s and Einstein’s theories in order to 
explain some of the phenomena attributed to dark matter. That this ugly fix 
works at all has long puzzled physicists. “I have a way of understanding the 
MOND success from a more fundamental perspective,” Verlinde said.

Many experts have called Verlinde’s paper compelling but hard to follow. While 
it remains to be seen whether his arguments will hold up to scrutiny, the 
timing is fortuitous. In a new analysis of galaxies published on Nov. 9 in 
Physical Review Letters, three astrophysicists led by Stacy McGaugh of Case 
Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, have strengthened MOND’s case 
against dark matter.

The researchers analyzed a diverse set of 153 galaxies, and for each one they 
compared the rotation speed of visible matter at any given distance from the 
galaxy’s center with the amount of visible matter contained within that 
galactic radius. Remarkably, these two variables were tightly linked in all the 
galaxies by a universal law, dubbed the “radial acceleration relation.” This 
makes perfect sense in the MOND paradigm, since visible matter is the exclusive 
source of the gravity driving the galaxy’s rotation (even if that gravity does 
not take the form prescribed by Newton or Einstein). With such a tight 
relationship between gravity felt by visible matter and gravity given by 
visible matter, there would seem to be no room, or need, for dark matter.

Even as dark matter proponents rise to its defense, a third challenge has 
materialized. In new research that has been presented at seminars and is under 
review by the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, a team of 
Dutch astronomers have conducted what they call the first test of Verlinde’s 
theory: In comparing his formulas to data from more than 30,000 galaxies, 
Margot Brouwer of Leiden University in the Netherlands and her colleagues found 
that Verlinde correctly predicts the gravitational distortion or “lensing” of 
light from the galaxies—another phenomenon that is normally attributed to dark 
matter. This is somewhat to be expected, as MOND’s original developer, the 
Israeli astrophysicist Mordehai Milgrom, showed years ago that MOND accounts 
for gravitational lensing data. Verlinde’s theory will need to succeed at 
reproducing dark matter phenomena in cases where the old MOND failed.

Kathryn Zurek, a dark matter theorist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 
said Verlinde’s proposal at least demonstrates how something like MOND might be 
right after all. “One of the challenges with modified gravity is that there was 
no sensible theory that gives rise to this behavior,” she said. “If 
[Verlinde’s] paper ends up giving that framework, then that by itself could be 
enough to breathe more life into looking at [MOND] more seriously.”

The New MOND

In Newton’s and Einstein’s theories, the gravitational attraction of a massive 
object drops in proportion to the square of the distance away from it. This 
means stars orbiting around a galaxy should feel less gravitational pull—and 
orbit more slowly—the farther they are from the galactic center. Stars’ 
velocities do drop as predicted by the inverse-square law in the inner galaxy, 
but instead of continuing to drop as they get farther away, their velocities 
level off beyond a certain point. The “flattening” of galaxy rotation speeds, 
discovered by the astronomer Vera Rubin in the 1970s, is widely considered to 
be Exhibit A in the case for dark matter—explained, in that paradigm, by dark 
matter clouds or “halos” that surround galaxies and give an extra gravitational 
acceleration to their outlying stars.


Lucy Reading-Ikkanda/Quanta Magazine
Searches for dark matter particles have proliferated—with hypothetical “weakly 
interacting massive particles” (WIMPs) and lighter-weight “axions” serving as 
prime candidates—but so far, experiments have found nothing.

Meanwhile, in the 1970s and 1980s, some researchers, including Milgrom, took a 
different tack. Many early attempts at tweaking gravity were easy to rule out, 
but Milgrom found a winning formula: When the gravitational acceleration felt 
by a star drops below a certain level—precisely 0.00000000012 meters per second 
per second, or 100 billion times weaker than we feel on the surface of the 
Earth—he postulated that gravity somehow switches from an inverse-square law to 
something close to an inverse-distance law. “There’s this magic scale,” McGaugh 
said. “Above this scale, everything is normal and Newtonian. Below this scale 
is where things get strange. But the theory does not really specify how you get 
from one regime to the other.”

Physicists do not like magic; when other cosmological observations seemed far 
easier to explain with dark matter than with MOND, they left the approach for 
dead. Verlinde’s theory revitalizes MOND by attempting to reveal the method 
behind the magic.

Verlinde, ruddy and fluffy-haired at 54 and lauded for highly technical string 
theory calculations, first jotted down a back-of-the-envelope version of his 
idea in 2010. It built on a famous paper he had written months earlier, in 
which he boldly declared that gravity does not really exist. By weaving 
together numerous concepts and conjectures at the vanguard of physics, he had 
concluded that gravity is an emergent thermodynamic effect, related to 
increasing entropy (or disorder). Then, as now, experts were uncertain what to 
make of the paper, though it inspired fruitful discussions.

The particular brand of emergent gravity in Verlinde’s paper turned out not to 
be quite right, but he was tapping into the same intuition that led other 
theorists to develop the modern holographic description of emergent gravity and 
space-time—an approach that Verlinde has now absorbed into his new work.

In this framework, bendy, curvy space-time and everything in it is a geometric 
representation of pure quantum information—that is, data stored in qubits. 
Unlike classical bits, qubits can exist simultaneously in two states (0 and 1) 
with varying degrees of probability, and they become “entangled” with each 
other, such that the state of one qubit determines the state of the other, and 
vice versa, no matter how far apart they are. Physicists have begun to work out 
the rules by which the entanglement structure of qubits mathematically 
translates into an associated space-time geometry. An array of qubits entangled 
with their nearest neighbors might encode flat space, for instance, while more 
complicated patterns of entanglement give rise to matter particles such as 
quarks and electrons, whose mass causes the space-time to be curved, producing 
gravity. “The best way we understand quantum gravity currently is this 
holographic approach,” said Mark Van Raamsdonk, a physicist at the University 
of British Columbia in Vancouver who has done influential work on the subject.

The mathematical translations are rapidly being worked out for holographic 
universes with an Escher-esque space-time geometry known as anti-de Sitter 
(AdS) space, but universes like ours, which have de Sitter geometries, have 
proved far more difficult. In his new paper, Verlinde speculates that it’s 
exactly the de Sitter property of our native space-time that leads to the dark 
matter illusion.

De Sitter space-times like ours stretch as you look far into the distance. For 
this to happen, space-time must be infused with a tiny amount of background 
energy—often called dark energy—which drives space-time apart from itself. 
Verlinde models dark energy as a thermal energy, as if our universe has been 
heated to an excited state. (AdS space, by contrast, is like a system in its 
ground state.) Verlinde associates this thermal energy with long-range 
entanglement between the underlying qubits, as if they have been shaken up, 
driving entangled pairs far apart. He argues that this long-range entanglement 
is disrupted by the presence of matter, which essentially removes dark energy 
from the region of space-time that it occupied. The dark energy then tries to 
move back into this space, exerting a kind of elastic response on the matter 
that is equivalent to a gravitational attraction.

Because of the long-range nature of the entanglement, the elastic response 
becomes increasingly important in larger volumes of space-time. Verlinde 
calculates that it will cause galaxy rotation curves to start deviating from 
Newton’s inverse-square law at exactly the magic acceleration scale pinpointed 
by Milgrom in his original MOND theory.

Van Raamsdonk calls Verlinde’s idea “definitely an important direction.” But he 
says it’s too soon to tell whether everything in the paper—which draws from 
quantum information theory, thermodynamics, condensed matter physics, 
holography and astrophysics—hangs together. Either way, Van Raamsdonk said, “I 
do find the premise interesting, and feel like the effort to understand whether 
something like that could be right could be enlightening.”

One problem, said Brian Swingle of Harvard and Brandeis universities, who also 
works in holography, is that Verlinde lacks a concrete model universe like the 
ones researchers can construct in AdS space, giving him more wiggle room for 
making unproven speculations. “To be fair, we’ve gotten further by working in a 
more limited context, one which is less relevant for our own gravitational 
universe,” Swingle said, referring to work in AdS space. “We do need to address 
universes more like our own, so I hold out some hope that his new paper will 
provide some additional clues or ideas going forward.”



The Case for Dark Matter

Verlinde could be capturing the zeitgeist the way his 2010 entropic-gravity 
paper did. Or he could be flat-out wrong. The question is whether his new and 
improved MOND can reproduce phenomena that foiled the old MOND and bolstered 
belief in dark matter.

One such phenomenon is the Bullet cluster, a galaxy cluster in the process of 
colliding with another. The visible matter in the two clusters crashes 
together, but gravitational lensing suggests that a large amount of dark 
matter, which does not interact with visible matter, has passed right through 
the crash site. Some physicists consider this indisputable proof of dark 
matter. However, Verlinde thinks his theory will be able to handle the Bullet 
cluster observations just fine. He says dark energy’s gravitational effect is 
embedded in space-time and is less deformable than matter itself, which would 
have allowed the two to separate during the cluster collision.

But the crowning achievement for Verlinde’s theory would be to account for the 
suspected imprints of dark matter in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), 
ancient light that offers a snapshot of the infant universe. The snapshot 
reveals the way matter at the time repeatedly contracted due to its 
gravitational attraction and then expanded due to self-collisions, producing a 
series of peaks and troughs in the CMB data. Because dark matter does not 
interact, it would only have contracted without ever expanding, and this would 
modulate the amplitudes of the CMB peaks in exactly the way that scientists 
observe. One of the biggest strikes against the old MOND was its failure to 
predict this modulation and match the peaks’ amplitudes. Verlinde expects that 
his version will work—once again, because matter and the gravitational effect 
of dark energy can separate from each other and exhibit different behaviors. 
“Having said this,” he said, “I have not calculated this all through.”

While Verlinde confronts these and a handful of other challenges, proponents of 
the dark matter hypothesis have some explaining of their own to do when it 
comes to McGaugh and his colleagues’ recent findings about the universal 
relationship between galaxy rotation speeds and their visible matter content.

In October, responding to a preprint of the paper by McGaugh and his 
colleagues, two teams of astrophysicists independently argued that the dark 
matter hypothesis can account for the observations. They say the amount of dark 
matter in a galaxy’s halo would have precisely determined the amount of visible 
matter the galaxy ended up with when it formed. In that case, galaxies’ 
rotation speeds, even though they’re set by dark matter and visible matter 
combined, will exactly correlate with either their dark matter content or their 
visible matter content (since the two are not independent). However, computer 
simulations of galaxy formation do not currently indicate that galaxies’ dark 
and visible matter contents will always track each other. Experts are busy 
tweaking the simulations, but Arthur Kosowsky of the University of Pittsburgh, 
one of the researchers working on them, says it’s too early to tell if the 
simulations will be able to match all 153 examples of the universal law in 
McGaugh and his colleagues’ galaxy data set. If not, then the standard dark 
matter paradigm is in big trouble. “Obviously this is something that the 
community needs to look at more carefully,” Zurek said.

Even if the simulations can be made to match the data, McGaugh, for one, 
considers it an implausible coincidence that dark matter and visible matter 
would conspire to exactly mimic the predictions of MOND at every location in 
every galaxy. “If somebody were to come to you and say, ‘The solar system 
doesn’t work on an inverse-square law, really it’s an inverse-cube law, but 
there’s dark matter that’s arranged just so that it always looks 
inverse-square,’ you would say that person is insane,” he said. “But that’s 
basically what we’re asking to be the case with dark matter here.”

Given the considerable indirect evidence and near consensus among physicists 
that dark matter exists, it still probably does, Zurek said. “That said, you 
should always check that you’re not on a bandwagon,” she added. “Even though 
this paradigm explains everything, you should always check that there isn’t 
something else going on.”

Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine, an editorially 
independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance 
public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in 
mathematics and the physical and life sciences.



Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to