April 23, 1994 - April 23, 2027

  • Date:30ThursdayJanuary 2020

    Scale Invariance at low accelerations as an alternative to the dark Universe

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    Time
    11:15 - 12:45
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    Auditorium
    Lecturer
    Mordehai Milgrom
    Weizmann Institute of Science
    Organizer
    Faculty of Physics
    Contact
    DetailsShow full text description of 11:00 Coffee, tea and more...»
    11:00 Coffee, tea and more
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Galactic systems and the Universe at large exhibit significa...»
    Galactic systems and the Universe at large exhibit significant anomalies when analyzed within Newtonian dynamics and general relativity: Large discrepancies are found between the gravitational masses required by the observed dynamics, and the masses we actually observe in these systems. The mainstream explanation of these anomalies invokes the dominant and ubiquitous presence of “dark matter”. The "MOND" paradigm suggests, instead, that the discrepancies are due to breakdown of standard dynamics in the limit of low accelerations, where MOND dynamics are space-time scale invariant. MOND accounts for many detailed manifestations of the mass discrepancies with no need for dark matter. I will outline the paradigm, some of its achievements, and some remaining problems and desiderata.
    Colloquia