Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Unified Modeling that Explains Dark Matter Data, Dark Energy Effects, and Galaxy Formation Stages

Version 1 : Received: 4 August 2022 / Approved: 5 August 2022 / Online: 5 August 2022 (03:25:10 CEST)

How to cite: Buckholtz, T.J. Unified Modeling that Explains Dark Matter Data, Dark Energy Effects, and Galaxy Formation Stages. Preprints 2022, 2022080114. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202208.0114.v1 Buckholtz, T.J. Unified Modeling that Explains Dark Matter Data, Dark Energy Effects, and Galaxy Formation Stages. Preprints 2022, 2022080114. https://doi.org/10.20944/preprints202208.0114.v1

Abstract

Physics lacks a confirmed description of dark matter, has yet to develop an adequate understanding of dark energy, and includes unverified conjectures regarding new elementary particles. This essay features modeling that addresses those problems and explains otherwise unexplained data. Our modeling starts from five bases – multipole expansions for the electromagnetic and gravitational fields associated with an object, the list of known elementary particles, some aspects of mathematics for isotropic harmonic oscillators, concordance cosmology, and a conjecture that the universe includes six isomers of most elementary particles. The multipole expansions – which have use in conjunction with Newtonian kinematics modeling, special relativity, and general relativity – lead to a catalog of kinematics properties such as charge, magnetic moment, mass, and repulsive gravitational pressure. The multipole expansions also point to all known elementary particles, some properties of those particles, and properties of some would-be elementary bosons and elementary fermions. The harmonic-oscillator mathematics points to Gauge symmetries regarding some elementary bosons. The would-be elementary fermions lack charge and would measure as dark matter. The conjecture regarding six isomers of most elementary particles rounds out and dominates our specification for dark matter. Five of the isomers form the basis for most dark matter. Our modeling explains ranges of observed ratios of dark matter effects to ordinary matter effects – for the universe, galaxy clusters, two sets of galaxies observed at high redshifts, three sets of galaxies observed at modest redshifts, and one type of depletion of cosmic microwave background radiation. Our description of repulsive gravitational pressure points toward resolution for tensions – between data and modeling – regarding the recent rate of expansion of the universe, resolution for possible tensions regarding large-scale clumping, and resolution for possible tensions regarding interactions between neighboring galaxies. Our work regarding gravity, dark matter, and elementary particles suggests characterizations for eras that might precede the inflationary epoch, a mechanism that might have produced baryon asymmetry, mechanisms that govern the rate of expansion of the universe, and insight about galaxy formation and evolution.

Keywords

Beyond the Standard Model; Dark matter; Galaxy formation; Neutrino masses; Evolution of the universe

Subject

Physical Sciences, Space Science

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