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Triton Station

Triton Station
A Blog About the Science and Sociology of Cosmology and Dark Matter
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CosmologyGalaxy FormationLCDMPhysical Sciences
Published

There has been a veritable feeding frenzy going on with the first JWST data. This is to be expected. Also to be expected is that some of these early results will ultimately prove to have been premature. So – caveat emptor! That said, I want to highlight one important aspect of these early results, there being too many to do all them all justice.

Personal ExperiencePhilosophy Of SciencePhysical Sciences
Published

Avi Loeb has a nice recent post Recalculating Academia, in which he discusses some of the issues confronting modern academia. One of the reasons I haven’t written here for a couple of months is despondency over the same problems. If you’re here reading this, you’ll likely be interested in what he has to say.

Dark MatterGalaxy FormationPhilosophy Of SciencePhysical Sciences
Published

The fine-tuning problem encountered by dark matter models that I talked about last time is generic. The knee-jerk reaction of most workers seems to be “let’s build a more sophisticated model.” That’s reasonable – if there is any hope of recovery.

Dark MatterData InterpretationGalaxy FormationPhilosophy Of SciencePhysical Sciences
Published

OK, basic review is over. Shit’s gonna get real. Here I give a short recounting of the primary reason I came to doubt the dark matter paradigm. This is entirely conventional – my concern about the viability of dark matter is a contradiction within its own context.

Galaxy EvolutionGalaxy FormationPhysical Sciences
Published

When we look up at the sky, we see stars. Stars are the building blocks of galaxies; we can see the stellar disk of the galaxy in which we live as the vault of the Milky Way arching across the sky. When we look beyond the Milky Way, we see galaxies.

CosmologyDark MatterGalaxy FormationLCDMPhilosophy Of SciencePhysical Sciences
Published

In order to agree on an interpretation, we first have to agree on the facts. Even when we agree on the facts, the available set of facts may admit multiple interpretations.

Data InterpretationLaws Of NaturePhilosophy Of ScienceRotation CurvesPhysical Sciences
Published

There is a rule of thumb in scientific publication that if a title is posed a question, the answer is no. It sucks being so far ahead of the field that I get to watch people repeat the mistakes I made (or almost made) and warned against long ago. There have been persistent claims of … Continue reading Are there credible deviations from the baryonic Tully-Fisher relation?