With bad news from Cassini, is dark matter’s main rival theory dead?
- June 6, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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With bad news from Cassini, is dark matter’s main rival theory dead?
Sub: Science and tech
Sec: Space sector
What is the Cassini mission?
- Cassini–Huygens, commonly called Cassini, was a space-research mission by NASA, the European Space Agency, and the Italian Space Agency to send a space probe to study the planet Saturn and its system, including its rings and natural satellites.
- The Flagship-class robotic spacecraft comprised both NASA’s Cassini space probe and ESA’s Huygens lander, which landed on Saturn’s largest moon, Titan.
What is Milgromian dynamics or MOND?
- In 1983, the physicist Mordehai Milgrom initiated a new research program in cosmology, called MOND (for MOdified Newtonian Dynamics), or Milgromian dynamics.
- In three papers, Milgrom proposed a set of postulates describing how Newton’s laws of gravity and motion should be changed in regimes of very low acceleration.
- Modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND) is a theory that proposes a modification of Newton’s second law to account for observed properties of galaxies.
- The main postulate of MOND is that gravity starts behaving differently to what Newton expected when it becomes very weak, as at the edges of galaxies.
- MOND is quite successful at predicting galaxy rotation without any dark matter, and it has a few other successes.
- Its primary motivation is to explain galaxy rotation curves without invoking dark matter, and is one of the most well-known theories of this class.
- It has not gained widespread acceptance, with the majority of astrophysicists supporting the Lambda-CDM model as providing a better fit to observations.
- MOND only changes the behavior of gravity at low accelerations, not at a specific distance from an object.
- This means that, although MOND effects would typically kick in several thousand light years away from a galaxy, if we look at an individual star, the effects would become highly significant at a tenth of a light year.
Bad news for CASSINI:
- Cassini mission, which orbited Saturn between 2004 and its final fiery crash into the planet in 2017. Saturn orbits the Sun at 10 AU.
- Due to a quirk of MOND, the gravity from the rest of our galaxy should cause Saturn’s orbit to deviate from the Newtonian expectation in a subtle way.
- This can be tested by timing radio pulses between Earth and Cassini.
- Since Cassini was orbiting Saturn, this helped to measure the Earth-Saturn distance and allowed us to precisely track Saturn’s orbit.
- But Cassini did not find any anomaly of the kind expected in MOND. Newton still works well for Saturn.
Bad news for MOND:
- MOND predicted that such stars should orbit around each other 20% faster than expected with Newton’s laws.
- MOND also fails to explain small bodies in the distant outer Solar System.
- Comets coming in from out there have a much narrower distribution in energy than Mond predicts.
- Newtonian gravity is strongly preferred over MOND on length scales below about a light year.