- #1
pines-demon
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I have seen a lot of popular hype concerning the recent publication of:
I want to understand what is so weird in this observation. I get the idea that "in average scientists would expect to find 50% of galaxies rotating one way, while the other 50% rotate the other way" but that is not what physics says, for me the important thing is that angular momentum is conserved, right? So counting the signs of the galaxies can be misleading isn't? You would have to know how heavy the galaxies are and how fast the galaxies are rotating to calculate their angular momentum. Maybe somebody with more patience can verify if that is in the article (I could not find it).
- Shamir, The distribution of galaxy rotation in JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 538 (2025), Pages 76–91
I want to understand what is so weird in this observation. I get the idea that "in average scientists would expect to find 50% of galaxies rotating one way, while the other 50% rotate the other way" but that is not what physics says, for me the important thing is that angular momentum is conserved, right? So counting the signs of the galaxies can be misleading isn't? You would have to know how heavy the galaxies are and how fast the galaxies are rotating to calculate their angular momentum. Maybe somebody with more patience can verify if that is in the article (I could not find it).
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