Is it true that dark is heavier than light and that’s why it sinks to the bottom of the ocean?
I learned that fact years ago while ice fishing. When the sun goes down and the temp drops, it takes much longer for your line to sink back to the bottom.
The difference is enough that you will instantly notice it when the sun goes down.
Ah, so you’ve heard the theory of the heaviness of dark, have you?
Those things on the ceiling that make you squint when you look at them? Some people call them “lights” or “light bulbs”, but in reality, they are “dark suckers”. The sun, like all stars, is just one huge dark sucker.
Now, sometimes they get full of dark, and have to be replaced. And that dark that you see under the table? Well, that’s because the dark can’t be sucked into the dark sucker because the table’s in the way.
Of course it is.
Notice that those things we call "light bulbs" turn dark or black when they've collected all the dark they can hold? Some get so full of dark matter they won't let any light in, so they look silvery and reflect your image (light) back at you! ;^)
Not sure why this seems to be a big deal; we've used different frequencies to cause physical actions on the atomic/molecular level for decades.