User talk:Xeroz

Tried adding this to Dark Matter discussion page but i guess it was a little too Forum-like.

Could this be the answer?

I'm no astrophysicist or anything but please bare with me. We know that Neutrinos seem to be in a state that one could almost say they were phased partially out of our reality... I mean being that they travel at the speed of light and billions of billions of them pass thru us each second yet they hardly ever react with any matter.

Could Dark matter itself be a form of matter but on the atomic scale part of it be sort of phased out of our reality....in a sort of not quite totally in this reality but not totally out of it either. But at the same time, still a whole of its own and still able to react with other matter of our universe?

Think of those 2 dimensional graphs u see that represent space and how all matter we know of bends that space... What if there were an additional graph that blanketed the space we know of (overlapping our whole universe) and could react with it, but was in itself in a state of being that allowed it to sort of stay fixed between matter and anti-matter?

I know, you think i'm totally insane right? Well, think of it this way. We have 0 and 1 don't we... 0 being the neutral and 1 being a positive. But, we also have -1... Anti-matter would be -1, being only theoretically possible (and possibly catastrophic if ever exposed to matter) to us on the matter side of the universe... but dark matter being the 0 would be in a fixed place between the two... Never being quite a total part of either, yet able to react with both on some things like say gravity?

I know i could be just blowing smoke, but i hope this helps to further the discussion and maybe it'll at least eliminate 1 birdbrained idea from the mix.

PS: If someone wins the Nobel using my idea i better get a little recognition. :) Xeroz (talk) 17:20, 27 June 2008 (UTC) (Xeroz (talk) 07:37, 5 February 2009 (UTC))