DARK MATTER'S UNKNOWN PHYSICS MAY EXPLAIN WEBB-OBSERVED MOST EARLY UNIVERSE SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES 1/8: The Elephant in the Universe: Our Hundred-Year Search for Dark Matter by Govert Schilling (Author), Avi Loeb (Foreword)
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 8 September 2024
⏱️ 8 minutes
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Summary
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/dark-matter-linked-to-supermassive-black-holes-in-the-early-universe/ar-AA1pBrL8
https://www.amazon.com/Elephant-Universe-Hundred-Year-Search-Matter/dp/0674248996
In The Elephant in the Universe, Govert Schilling explores the fascinating history of the search for dark matter. Evidence for its existence comes from a wealth of astronomical observations. Theories and computer simulations of the evolution of the universe are also suggestive: they can be reconciled with astronomical measurements only if dark matter is a dominant component of nature. Physicists have devised huge, sensitive instruments to search for dark matter, which may be unlike anything else in the cosmos―some unknown elementary particle. Yet so far dark matter has escaped every experiment. Indeed, dark matter is so elusive that some scientists are beginning to suspect there might be something wrong with our theories about gravity or with the current paradigms of cosmology. Schilling interviews both believers and heretics and paints a colorful picture of the history and current status of dark matter research, with astronomers and physicists alike trying to make sense of theory and observation.
1897 WISCONSIN
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is CBS Eye on the World. Here's John Bachelor. |
| 0:10.0 | I welcome Dark Matter, what we know and what we want to know, a new book, The Elephant |
| 0:17.9 | in the Universe, 100 years search for Dark Matter. |
| 0:21.0 | Guvert Schilling is the author and we begin 100 years before this moment. |
| 0:27.0 | Yacubus Cornelius Copitan, |
| 0:31.0 | Captain, born 1851, writes a paper in May of 1822 that is revelatory. |
| 0:40.0 | It's entitled First Attempt at a Theory of the Arrangement and Motion of the Sidereal System. |
| 0:47.8 | That paper has in it this sentence the amount of dark matter from its gravitational effect. |
| 0:55.0 | Govered a very good evening to you, thank you. |
| 0:58.0 | Introduces this to Mr. Kopton, |
| 1:00.0 | what was it that brought him to make that speculation that we now spend so much time puzzling over? |
| 1:06.2 | Good evening to you. |
| 1:07.2 | Yeah, hello, very nice to meet you and thanks for having me. |
| 1:10.2 | Jacobus, Captain, was a duchess Voll astronomer and as you said his paper in 1922 was a groundbreaking paper because one century ago |
| 1:21.0 | astronomers hardly knew about the universe that we know of. |
| 1:25.6 | We now have this wonderful James Webb space telescope that is covering galaxies out to billions |
| 1:31.0 | of light years away, but a hundred years ago, |
| 1:33.5 | no one was even sure whether or not our Milky Way was alone. |
| 1:37.0 | And Captain was one of the few who thought |
| 1:39.7 | that the Milky Way galaxy was the only thing in the universe. |
| 1:44.0 | It was later called the Captain Universe because he thought that was all there was to it. |
| 1:50.0 | And he thought that other spiral galaxies, spiral Nebbuli as they called them back then, were actually |
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