Dark matter faces its biggest challenge of all
“Yet in all of them, a very interesting and unexpected property shows itself: there’s a relationship between the observed gravitational acceleration and the distribution of the normal (baryonic, or protons, neutrons and electrons) matter alone. In other words, if you measure how quickly the galaxies rotate, it seems to depend — within a reasonable set of errors — only on the presence of the normal matter.”
Dark matter is a hugely successful theory for explaining a whole slew of observations about the Universe. Just by adding this one ingredient to the mix, we can successfully simulate and reproduce the large-scale structure, CMB fluctuations, galaxy clustering and cluster collision properties observed in our Universe. Without dark matter, there’s no other way known to make the Universe work in line with what we see. And yet, if you go down to the small scales of individual galaxies, dark matter predicts a dark matter halo of a specific profile with specific rotation properties. When we look at the actual galaxies, those rotation properties don’t match! Even worse, they appear to be correlated solely with the normal matter content of the galaxies, and have no dependence on whether the galaxy is rich-or-poor in dark matter.

At first glance, Adrian Borda’s photograph seems to show an old room. In reality, this is the interior of a cello with light shining through the f-holes. Dust particles in the air trace out pathlines that reveal the turbulent movements of air inside the instrument. Both the camera’s perspective and the visible flow try to trick our minds into seeing something larger than reality. It’s a reminder that the patterns and forms of fluid flow repeat across an enormous range of scales, from millimeters to light-years. (Image credit: A. Borda; via Joseph S./CU Boulder Flow Viz)
After reading reviews I really want to spend 2-3 hours to play Virginia.
Likelihood of that happening is pretty close to zero.
Overhearing a bona fide Trump supporter talking in the pantry.
Of course he has a Russian accent. I wonder if it’s racist of me to say.

The cicadas are still there, though not as many, and it already definitely smells like leaves that started falling.

5:10 is a new bloody mid week record for these morning walks thanks to refusal to sleep.
It is amazing how many cars are already out, their poor owners on their way to work, presumably?
The waning moon, just before it disappears, looks f..g incredible, and that’s one thing I am happy I got to see.
Heater/ac filter at home is filthy and we all keep sneezing. Home Despot won’t carry it so had to special-order it and wait 2 weeks to arrive then ½ hour in line to pick it up. And it’s all crumpled up because of how they stored it.
Into an even longer line I go to return it.
Id rather be sleeping









