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The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 1:05 am
You know how those fuckheads feel about "Dark Matter."
https://www.rawstory.com/2018/03/breakth...ver-stars/
Quote:Breakthrough in the search for dark matter from the first ever stars
Quote:Although it happened billions of years ago, researchers have been able to infer quite a lot about the Big Bang and the following eons.
For example, that it happened and the fucking bible is superstitious bullshit.
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 1:47 am
(This post was last modified: March 3, 2018 at 1:48 am by purplepurpose.)
Fanatical Theists: Those scientists are Satan's slave, they are lying.
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 4:50 am
Probably the most ludicrous 'justification' I've ever heard from theists as to why they reject the findings of science runs something like, 'Science can't be trusted, because researchers falsify results to obtain grant money.' While this is certainly true on occasion (scientists are human, and have the potential to be just as venal as anyone else), theists couch this argument in such a way as to suggest that all scientists are simply swimming in grant money, surreptitiously using public funds to finance their lifestyles of flash cars, easy women, and solid gold bog seats.
So, for any professional scientists here at AF, kindly return the chinchilla coats, the Lambos, and that nude ice sculpture of Carl Sagan you keep in your walk in freezer, and get the fuck back to work.
Boru
‘I can’t be having with this.’ - Esmeralda Weatherwax
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 5:09 am
(March 3, 2018 at 4:50 am)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Probably the most ludicrous 'justification' I've ever heard from theists as to why they reject the findings of science runs something like, 'Science can't be trusted, because researchers falsify results to obtain grant money.' While this is certainly true on occasion (scientists are human, and have the potential to be just as venal as anyone else), theists couch this argument in such a way as to suggest that all scientists are simply swimming in grant money, surreptitiously using public funds to finance their lifestyles of flash cars, easy women, and solid gold bog seats.
So, for any professional scientists here at AF, kindly return the chinchilla coats, the Lambos, and that nude ice sculpture of Carl Sagan you keep in your walk in freezer, and get the fuck back to work.
Boru
This is my pet peeve too. People try to use this to argue against Climate Change - that it's greedy climate scientists trying to fake cilmate change for grant money.
Do they realize that the opposition is literally THE OIL INDUSTRY and THE AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY. The Climate Research Industry is probably 1/1000th the size of those who have good reason to pretend climate change isn't happening. It's pretty obvious which side the greed is on.
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 6:45 am
I dont get it.
The Raw Story Article does provide a sourced link early on under blue "here", and that takes you to a college research article. But what am I missing? The Raw Story article talks about proof of dark matter, but the college article talks about the behavior of hydrogen atoms and going back to the 180,000,000 years after the big bang. What do the behaviors of hydrogen atoms have to do with "dark matter"?
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 7:55 am
(March 3, 2018 at 4:50 am)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Probably the most ludicrous 'justification' I've ever heard from theists as to why they reject the findings of science runs something like, 'Science can't be trusted, because researchers falsify results to obtain grant money.' While this is certainly true on occasion (scientists are human, and have the potential to be just as venal as anyone else), theists couch this argument in such a way as to suggest that all scientists are simply swimming in grant money, surreptitiously using public funds to finance their lifestyles of flash cars, easy women, and solid gold bog seats.
So, for any professional scientists here at AF, kindly return the chinchilla coats, the Lambos, and that nude ice sculpture of Carl Sagan you keep in your walk in freezer, and get the fuck back to work.
Boru
Disclaimer: I am only responsible for what I say, not what you choose to understand.
(November 14, 2018 at 8:57 pm)The Valkyrie Wrote: Have a good day at work. If we ever meet in a professional setting, let me answer your question now. Yes, I DO want fries with that.
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 11:42 am
(This post was last modified: March 3, 2018 at 11:47 am by polymath257.)
(March 3, 2018 at 6:45 am)Brian37 Wrote: I dont get it.
The Raw Story Article does provide a sourced link early on under blue "here", and that takes you to a college research article. But what am I missing? The Raw Story article talks about proof of dark matter, but the college article talks about the behavior of hydrogen atoms and going back to the 180,000,000 years after the big bang. What do the behaviors of hydrogen atoms have to do with "dark matter"?
That's a very good question. What happens is that dark matter affects the rate of universal expansion, and thereby of the cooling that leads to the formation of hydrogen atoms (as opposed to ions, which were there before). So, the amount of dark matter determines *when* those hydrogen atoms form. And *that* leaves a signature on the background radiation, which is what was detected here. There also seems to be a higher level than expected of interaction between the dark matter and ordinary matter at that point--which is very interesting. This also affected the cooling rate.
So the point is that the rate of expansion (and hence, the cooling) is affected by dark matter and *that* is what we are detecting.
Unfortunately, such indirect measurements are required for dark matter because dark matter doesn't interact strongly with light or ordinary matter (hence, why it is termed 'dark'). So we can only really detect it through its gravitational effects (or, if a certain type of particle, by its decay--not done yet, but possible). In this case, it is the gravitational effects changing the rate of expansion at the stage where hydrogen atoms are formed.
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 12:00 pm
(March 3, 2018 at 11:42 am)polymath257 Wrote: (March 3, 2018 at 6:45 am)Brian37 Wrote: I dont get it.
The Raw Story Article does provide a sourced link early on under blue "here", and that takes you to a college research article. But what am I missing? The Raw Story article talks about proof of dark matter, but the college article talks about the behavior of hydrogen atoms and going back to the 180,000,000 years after the big bang. What do the behaviors of hydrogen atoms have to do with "dark matter"?
That's a very good question. What happens is that dark matter affects the rate of universal expansion, and thereby of the cooling that leads to the formation of hydrogen atoms (as opposed to ions, which were there before). So, the amount of dark matter determines *when* those hydrogen atoms form. And *that* leaves a signature on the background radiation, which is what was detected here. There also seems to be a higher level than expected of interaction between the dark matter and ordinary matter at that point--which is very interesting. This also affected the cooling rate.
So the point is that the rate of expansion (and hence, the cooling) is affected by dark matter and *that* is what we are detecting.
Unfortunately, such indirect measurements are required for dark matter because dark matter doesn't interact strongly with light or ordinary matter (hence, why it is termed 'dark'). So we can only really detect it through its gravitational effects (or, if a certain type of particle, by its decay--not done yet, but possible). In this case, it is the gravitational effects changing the rate of expansion at the stage where hydrogen atoms are formed.
It seems to be a long universal tool of discovery in science, that when we can't detect something directly we study indirectly the objects we can detect, just like we cant see into a black hole, but can see the effects of the matter around the even horizon.
So if I am reading you correctly the behavior of hydrogen atoms and ions are how we are indirectly studying dark matter based on gravity?
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 12:03 pm
(March 3, 2018 at 12:00 pm)Brian37 Wrote: (March 3, 2018 at 11:42 am)polymath257 Wrote: That's a very good question. What happens is that dark matter affects the rate of universal expansion, and thereby of the cooling that leads to the formation of hydrogen atoms (as opposed to ions, which were there before). So, the amount of dark matter determines *when* those hydrogen atoms form. And *that* leaves a signature on the background radiation, which is what was detected here. There also seems to be a higher level than expected of interaction between the dark matter and ordinary matter at that point--which is very interesting. This also affected the cooling rate.
So the point is that the rate of expansion (and hence, the cooling) is affected by dark matter and *that* is what we are detecting.
Unfortunately, such indirect measurements are required for dark matter because dark matter doesn't interact strongly with light or ordinary matter (hence, why it is termed 'dark'). So we can only really detect it through its gravitational effects (or, if a certain type of particle, by its decay--not done yet, but possible). In this case, it is the gravitational effects changing the rate of expansion at the stage where hydrogen atoms are formed.
It seems to be a long universal tool of discovery in science, that when we can't detect something directly we study indirectly the objects we can detect, just like we cant see into a black hole, but can see the effects of the matter around the even horizon.
So if I am reading you correctly the behavior of hydrogen atoms and ions are how we are indirectly studying dark matter based on gravity?
That is my understanding, yes. I haven't read the detailed paper, though. When I do, I'll report any mistakes I have made.
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RE: The Klan Is Not Going To Be Happy About This
March 3, 2018 at 12:11 pm
"Come to the Dark Matter side, we have .... whatever this shit is..."
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