Dark Matter – Does it Exist? Friday 8th January 2021


Dark Matter – Does it Exist? Friday 8th January 2021
In the Astro news today a study/theory that dark matter may not exist. Though I tried to find the authors name to quote it, I couldn’t locate it.

My concept of ‘dark matter’ differs to the general understanding of it.
Dark matter was theorised to exist to explain gravitational issues within galaxies. Gravity exists to keep things condensed, to draw matter and control the environment.
Back in 2014, I determined everything had its own unique gravitational value. Which is the seen and also the unseen, which are those things that we know exist, as well as that which we are still to learn exists.
Unseen matter in the universe and outside of the universe must exist. All the things we have seen with special lenses, always existed. When I refer to the ‘molecular world’ it sounds naive, but it really is a world unseen that we see little parts of as we progress. So it appears disjointed and fragmented to us and just seems like scientific building blocks. It actually is a full world. And that tiny world built ours and us, for that matter.
The stars are so incredibly big and yet they too started from the tiny molecular world.

Dark matter, (which I still feel should be called light matter) does and must exist. Gravity acts gently upon it. It has no need to have its own gravity. If we could see it, it likely moves as a weightless particle ocean.
Stars must be able to adjust their gratitational forces. Whatever unusual gravity forces we observe, it is the stars.
When stars merge they increase their life spans.
When our universe began they were young (the original stars) and that was a long time ago and resource abundant. When stars merge, their gravitational force must adjust almost immediately to suit. Planets obviously adjust (gravitationally) over time as required.
Dark matter exists for the purpose and needs of the molecular world and stars control gravity. (Each star having their individual size, gravity force needs/abilities etc) That is (briefly) my conclusion.
Fiona MacLeod (C)