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Is there any solid, scientific counterargument against the hypothetical explanation that attributes dark matter as matter in hidden planes of existence?
I am trying to construct a world in which there are creatures and objects similar to ordinary objects (physically, if not biologically), and they are normally hidden in different spatial planes where only gravity can pass through, thus appearing like dark matter.
The kind of "matter" in the hidden dimension would resemble monsters and spacecrafts of a fashion not too deviant from human imagination, they also supposedly inhabit planet-like bodies, although that would not be required.
I wonder if there is any counterarguments in physics that will undermine this construction, for example, could one refute this claim by pointing out the fact that an amount of matter packed as densely as dark matter appear to be packed would surely form black-holes or other intelligible structures like stars and planet which should cause gravitational lensing effect that is different from what is observed.
Aside from the extra pull to cater for the merry-go-round stars, everything else is just speculation. – user6760 – 2016-11-17T02:09:30.487
1Is there "any counterarguments in physics that will undermine this construction"? There is no evidence that dark matter either resembles or looks like hidden dimensions. All physical models involving hidden dimensions don't result in dark matter. Dark matter belongs here in our dimensions, it isn't hidden away. – a4android – 2016-11-17T10:20:41.943