scholarly journals Debated Models for Galactic Rotation Curves: A Review and Mathematical Assessment

Galaxies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne M. Hofmeister ◽  
Robert E. Criss

Proposed explanations of galactic rotation curves (RC = tangential velocity vs. equatorial radius, determined from Doppler measurements) involve dramatically different assumptions. A dominant, original camp invoked huge amounts of unknown, non-baryonic dark matter (NBDM) in surrounding haloes to reconcile RC simulated using their Newtonian orbital models (NOMs) for billions of stars in spiral galaxies with the familiar Keplerian orbital patterns of the few, tiny planets in our Solar System. A competing minority proposed that hypothetical, non-relativistic, non-Newtonian forces govern the internal motions of galaxies. More than 40 years of controversy has followed. Other smaller groups, unsatisfied by explanations rooted in unknown matter or undocumented forces, have variously employed force summations, spin models, or relativistic adaptations to explain galactic rotation curves. Some small groups have pursued inverse models and found no need for NBDM. The successes, failures, and underlying assumptions of the above models are reviewed in this paper, focusing on their mathematical underpinnings. We also show that extractions of RC from Doppler measurements need revising to account for the effect of galaxy shape on flux-velocity profiles and for the possible presence of a secondary spin axis. The latter is indicated by complex Doppler shift patterns. Our findings, combined with independent evidence such as hadron collider experiments failing to produce non-baryonic matter, suggest that a paradigm shift is unfolding.

2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 905-916 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Rahaman ◽  
Peter K. F. Kuhfittig ◽  
K. Chakraborty ◽  
A. A. Usmani ◽  
Saibal Ray

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (23) ◽  
pp. 1950188
Author(s):  
Nayan Sarkar ◽  
Susmita Sarkar ◽  
Farook Rahaman ◽  
P. K. F. Kuhfittig ◽  
G. S. Khadekar

It is well-known that traversable wormholes are valid solutions of the Einstein field equations, but these structures can only be maintained by violating the null energy condition. In this paper, we have obtained such wormhole solutions in an isothermal galactic halo, as well as in a void. We have shown that the null energy condition is violated, with the help of a suitable redshift function obtained from flat galactic rotation curves.


2016 ◽  
Vol 361 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Farook Rahaman ◽  
Banashree Sen ◽  
Koushik Chakraborty ◽  
G. C. Shit

Galaxies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan Sipols ◽  
Alex Pavlovich

The aim of this paper is to test the need for non-baryonic dark matter in the context of galactic rotation and the apparent difference between distributions of galactic mass and luminosity. We present a set of rotation curves and 3.6 μm surface brightness profiles for a diverse sample of 214 galaxies. Using rotation curves as the sole input into our Newtonian disk model, we compute non-parametric radial profiles of surface mass density. All profiles exhibit lower density than parametric models with dark halos and provide a superior fit with observed rotation curves. Assuming all dynamical mass is in main-sequence stars, we estimate radial distributions of characteristic star mass implied by the corresponding pairs of density and brightness profiles. We find that for 132 galaxies or 62% of the sample, the relation between density and brightness can be fully explained by a radially declining stellar mass gradient. Such idealized stellar population fitting can also largely address density and brightness distributions of the remaining 82 galaxies, but their periphery shows, on average, 14 M⊙/pc2 difference between total density and light-constrained stellar density. We discuss how this density gap can be interpreted, by considering a low-luminosity baryonic matter, observational uncertainties, and visibility cutoffs for red dwarf populations. Lastly, we report tight correlation between radial density and brightness trends, and the discovered flattening of surface brightness profiles—both being evidence against dark matter. Our findings make non-baryonic dark matter unnecessary in the context of galactic rotation.


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