This Is Why Every Galaxy Doesn't Have The Same Amount Of Dark Matter
“It isn't the properties of one or two galaxies that will be the ultimate test of dark matter, however. Whether these galaxies are generic dwarf galaxies or our first examples of dark matter-free galaxies isn't the point; the point is that there are hundreds of billions of these dwarf galaxies out there that are presently below the limits of what's observable, detectable, or having their properties measured. When we get there, especially in the distant Universe and in post-interaction environments, we can fully expect to truly find this yet-unconfirmed population of galaxies.
If dark matter is real, it must be separable from normal matter, and that works both ways. We've already found the dark matter-rich galaxies out there, as well as isolated intergalactic plasma. But dark matter-free galaxies? They might be right around the corner, and this is why everybody is so excited!”
When the Universe was first born, everything was uniform. There was dark matter and normal matter everywhere, in the same 5-to-1 ratio in all structures. But then the Universe had to go and get messy. It formed stars and galaxies of different masses and sizes, and that’s where the trouble started. In large, massive galaxies, even cataclysms like supernovae or active supermassive black holes don’t eject very much normal matter. But in small galaxies, significant amounts of normal matter can get ejected, upping that ratio to dozens or event hundreds to one. That ejected matter doesn’t just go away, but can itself, at least in theory, form dark matter-free galaxies. Where are we in our understanding of galaxies, dark matter, and gravitation?
It’s just a small piece of the puzzle, but this explains why not every galaxy has the same 5-to-1 ratio you might naively expect!











