
Originally Posted by
kzb
...the MOND people certainly do not think the Bullet Cluster is any serious threat to their theory:
QUOTE:
The accepted picture has it that about 4 percent of the mass in the universe is in the form of baryons (standard matter). Of this we have so far seen (detected) only a tenth. So we know anyway that there is still much standard matter in the universe to be detected (beside the putative DM). What MOND still requires in clusters is a small fraction of that, so really it's no big deal.
http://www.astro.umd.edu/~ssm/mond/moti_bullet.html
You mean one MOND person.
"No big deal"?... That doesn't sound very quantitative. And that link goes to a page with a whole lot of words, but finally McGaugh explains his Bullet Cluster argument in a single sentence:
"When two clusters collide head on the gas components of the two just stick together and stay in the middle, while the rest (galaxies plus this extra component I spoke of) just go through and stay together."
Wave to McGaugh. I think he's handwaving to us.
BTW, the "extra component" he mentions is.... more baryons. He simply claims there are 10 times more baryons than we currently detect. As if dozens of teams of astrophysicists have not gone out and looked for all those missing baryons over the last several decades. But they have found only a few percent of what is needed.