Dark matter and ordinary (baryonic) stars
"Astronomers may have identified a type of star in the very early universe which fits the profile of the long hypothesized Dark Star.
@spacetimewithstuartgary"
There is a three fold observation Gap here…
Why aren't there any Dark Matter stars observed nearby in our own galaxy? And given "no star has ever appeared where no star was seen before" Conventional stars or Dark stars, this begs the question why would a Dark star even form in the first place?
That question has never been answered theoretically. So I would pose three questions to you:
1. We see stars disappearing but none coming out of the darkness. Why don't we see any new stars (dark or ordinary) because at least 3 new ones are hypothesized to form every year in our own galaxy?
2. Given Dark matter is supposedly 27% of Ω mass, only 5% of all matter is supposedly ordinary (baryonic) matter, this would be an advantage for dark matter stars forming, still no stars formed, why ?
3. The search for Dark matter has been going on for 40 years without any scientific success, since it does not exist why is Big Bang theory still viable?














