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Science |
Earth May Have Dark Matter Disc |
2014-01-05 |
Posted by:Grunter |
#11 Sniff, sniff, and to think it only took 30 years to discover it. Welcome back to the future of the 1980's. Call me when Subway brings back its "Buy-one-get-one-Free" promo. |
Posted by: JosephMendiola 2014-01-05 19:14 |
#10 'eing' = 'ring' |
Posted by: USN, Ret. 2014-01-05 15:15 |
#9 if it was a halo, they'd call it "The Obama Ring" I dunno Frank; equating a dark eing to Bambi sounds faintly racist |
Posted by: USN, Ret. 2014-01-05 15:14 |
#8 if it was a halo, they'd call it "The Obama Ring" |
Posted by: Frank G 2014-01-05 14:44 |
#7 Like that guy said, there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in your philosophy, biatches. KBK makes interesting points in #6. |
Posted by: SteveS 2014-01-05 14:35 |
#6 Hm, a disk rather than a halo - that implies entities with mass and angular momentum moving below escape velocity. And which don't interact with the electromagnetic force or the solar wind. |
Posted by: KBK 2014-01-05 13:34 |
#5 Isn't that science settled yet? |
Posted by: Bobby 2014-01-05 11:20 |
#4 You sure this isn't the effect of Al Gore circumnavigating the globe selling carbon credits? |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2014-01-05 08:53 |
#3 ![]() As you will hear in my upcoming State of the Union, DMD is a challenge we can solve together. It will not be easy, but we must lay aside our differences and pull together to achieve this common goal. |
Posted by: Besoeker 2014-01-05 03:16 |
#2 or axions - although, iiuc, they would be more likely to form a ring than a disc |
Posted by: lord garth 2014-01-05 02:44 |
#1 Yes, but is the disc MACHOS or WIMPS ? ![]() |
Posted by: George Alowishus Hatrack III 2014-01-05 01:29 |