WildMoon wrote:Okay, before I go and read the MOND
thing (and probably end up making my head selfdestruct in
the act) I wanna say:
If Dark Energy is a
repulsive force, this would make
White Holes possible, though they would no longer be
thought to exert anti-gravity, they would just have alot of
Dark Energy. For, white holes would not be possible is they
exerted anti-gravity, because unless they spontaneously
appear, they could not form (no star).
Also, Dark Energy could hurt the Big Bang theory since it
says due to the galaxy expanding, the galaxies and other
stuff move away from each other like when you stick
stickers on a balloon and blow up that ballon (but wait,
this ought to mean they don't move away from each other,
just the universe's center, or where ever the universe
began, wouldn't it?). So, as long as objects move away
from a certain point and not each other, then Dark Energy
would not put a damper on the Big Bang theory (even
though there is no other theory to take the Big Bang's
place, so it won't matter anway, will it? Besides, there's the
cosmic background radiation)
Also, to be a bit unscientific, I like the idea of dark matter
ther than the other thing with another dimension.

Wildmoon (and other DarkEnergy fans),
the MOND paper (1983-84) was written long before you
were born and thus might need some "modernization" . It
was notably written before DarkEnergy was known to
exist...
DarkEnergy may be viewed as a
potential (energy)
that just makes the galaxies recede from each other faster
than what is expected from the recession movement due
to the BigBang alone. Or in terms of that familiar
expanding balloon picture with galaxies distributed on its
surface, DarkEnergy would contribute a NEGATIVE pressure
making the balloon expansion faster...
The original evidence came from the following clever
observation (Perlmutter
et al).
It was known that like Cepheids act as "standard candles",
Supernovae of Type Ia act as "
standard BOMBS "

,
meaning that the emitted light intensity after a SN Ia
explosion appears to be
universal!
Hence from observing the /apparent magnitudes/ of such
supernovae, we may calculate their distances!
That in turn allows to compare the measured
distance-redshift (<-> z) relation of SN Ia observations
with that predicted from standard cosmology. The form of
the comoving distance as function of the redshift z
parametrically depends on possible fractions of energy
density due to e.g. luminous
and dark matter in the
universe.
To everybody's GREAT surprise, it was found from this
comparison at high redshift z, that a significant
accelerating component ("dark" energy fraction ~ 0.7)
must be added in order to make cosmology fit the SN Ia
data!
At this stage, many scientists were still sceptical, since the
SN Ia effect is pretty small after all and might also be due
to systematic uncertainties. However, the subsequent
precision experiments about the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) radiation (BOOMERANG,WMAP,...)
produced INDEPENDENT and convincing evidence for
DarkEnergy. The required magnitude of DarkEnergy from
CMB measurements was about equal to the earlier required
strength from SN Ia data! That eliminated remaining
doubt...
Another way of putting the notion of DarkEnergy is that
--if probed by the gravitational force--
"empty"
space appears to have a tiny but nonvanishing energy
density! Actually, calling it "cosmological constant",
Einstein thought about this possibility already in his
equations, long ago...
Clearly, there is then the eminent challenge to theorists
working on fundamental physics (like myself

), to
CALCULATE the magnitude of that "cosmological constant"
<=> Dark Energy in terms of other characteristic known
energy scales!
The puzzle is that the value of the "cosmological constant"
is MANY orders of magnitude smaller than our current
understanding of fundamental physics seems to suggest.
On the other hand, the fractional DarkEnergy is large
enough to dominate the energy density of the Universe on
cosmological scales!
Actually, the energy fraction due to
matter is only ~ 0.3,
with most of it from DarkMatter around galaxies!. The
needed DarkEnergy fraction is ~ 0.7, however, with their
sum adding up to 1! Note that DarkMatter and DarkEnergy
are qualitatively very different, though.
Clearly an outstanding question is about a possible
(dynamical) relation between DarkMatter and DarkEnergy!
Please, don't suggest E_dark = m_dark * c^2
Bye Fridger