What if the "dark matter" is actually ions not observable from our telescopes? Plasma Physics hold ions permeating the Universe as a premise & has physical experiments reproducable in the lab to back up their claims...And can use classical EM equations explain how the stars & galaxies work instead of some novel Physics which needs constructs such as "Dark Matter" to balance the equations...
> What if the "dark matter" is actually ions not observable from our telescopes?
We have radio telescopes that can see all the way down to a few tens of MHz. This is far colder than the CMB, and certainly much too cold for the intergalactic medium.
> Plasma Physics hold ions permeating the Universe as a premise & has physical experiments reproducable in the lab to back up their claims
Yes, plasmas exist. There are lots of them in space. This is completely uncontroversial.
> And can use classical EM equations explain how the stars & galaxies work
Absolutely not. Galaxies are firmly in the nonclassical regime.
> We have radio telescopes that can see all the way down to a few tens of MHz. This is far colder than the CMB, and certainly much too cold for the intergalactic medium.
PV = nRT
What if the P is very low & V is very big...like it is in space? What would the plasma in dark discharge radiate?
> Absolutely not. Galaxies are firmly in the nonclassical regime.
According to some models. Do these models have reproducible experimental evidence? If not, I don't see how you can credibly be so sure of yourself...
Sure, exotic & speculative math is way more fun than reconciling with physical reality. Without reproducible experimental evidence, the model is non-falsifiable (& non-provable).
In contrast, the Plasma model does have physically reproducible experiments that are able to create galactic phenomena in the lab. Live physical experimentation...not computer simulations using math that has never been verified by physical experiment.