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Galaxy rotation curve

The rotation curve of a disc galaxy (also called a velocity curve) is a plot of the orbital speeds of visible stars or gas in that galaxy versus their radial distance from that galaxy's centre. It is typically rendered graphically as a plot, and the data observed from each side of a spiral galaxy are generally asymmetric, so that data from each side are averaged to create the curve. A significant discrepancy exists between the experimental curves observed, and a curve derived by applying gravity theory to the matter observed in a galaxy. Theories involving dark matter are the main postulated solutions to account for the variance.[3]

Rotation curve of spiral galaxy Messier 33 (yellow and blue points with error bars), and a predicted one from distribution of the visible matter (gray line). The discrepancy between the two curves can be accounted for by adding a dark matter halo surrounding the galaxy.[1][2]
Left: A simulated galaxy without dark matter. Right: Galaxy with a flat rotation curve that would be expected with dark matter.

The rotational/orbital speeds of galaxies/stars do not follow the rules found in other orbital systems such as stars/planets and planets/moons that have most of their mass at the centre. Stars revolve around their galaxy's centre at equal or increasing speed over a large range of distances. In contrast, the orbital velocities of planets in planetary systems and moons orbiting planets decline with distance according to Kepler’s third law. This reflects the mass distributions within those systems. The mass estimations for galaxies based on the light they emit are far too low to explain the velocity observations.[4]

The galaxy rotation problem is the discrepancy between observed galaxy rotation curves and the theoretical prediction, assuming a centrally dominated mass associated with the observed luminous material. When mass profiles of galaxies are calculated from the distribution of stars in spirals and mass-to-light ratios in the stellar disks, they do not match with the masses derived from the observed rotation curves and the law of gravity. A solution to this conundrum is to hypothesize the existence of dark matter and to assume its distribution from the galaxy's center out to its halo.

Though dark matter is by far the most accepted explanation of the rotation problem, other proposals have been offered with varying degrees of success. Of the possible alternatives, one of the most notable is modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND), which involves modifying the laws of gravity.[5]

History edit

In 1932, Jan Hendrik Oort became the first to report that measurements of the stars in the solar neighborhood indicated that they moved faster than expected when a mass distribution based upon visible matter was assumed, but these measurements were later determined to be essentially erroneous.[6] In 1939, Horace Babcock reported in his PhD thesis measurements of the rotation curve for Andromeda which suggested that the mass-to-luminosity ratio increases radially.[7] He attributed that to either the absorption of light within the galaxy or to modified dynamics in the outer portions of the spiral and not to any form of missing matter. Babcock's measurements turned out to disagree substantially with those found later, and the first measurement of an extended rotation curve in good agreement with modern data was published in 1957 by Henk van de Hulst and collaborators, who studied M31 with the newly commissioned Dwingeloo 25 meter telescope.[8] A companion paper by Maarten Schmidt showed that this rotation curve could be fit by a flattened mass distribution more extensive than the light.[9] In 1959, Louise Volders used the same telescope to demonstrate that the spiral galaxy M33 also does not spin as expected according to Keplerian dynamics.[10]

Reporting on NGC 3115, Jan Oort wrote that "the distribution of mass in the system appears to bear almost no relation to that of light... one finds the ratio of mass to light in the outer parts of NGC 3115 to be about 250".[11] On page 302–303 of his journal article, he wrote that "The strongly condensed luminous system appears imbedded in a large and more or less homogeneous mass of great density" and although he went on to speculate that this mass may be either extremely faint dwarf stars or interstellar gas and dust, he had clearly detected the dark matter halo of this galaxy.

The Carnegie telescope (Carnegie Double Astrograph) was intended to study this problem of Galactic rotation.[12]

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Vera Rubin, an astronomer at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism at the Carnegie Institution of Washington, worked with a new sensitive spectrograph that could measure the velocity curve of edge-on spiral galaxies to a greater degree of accuracy than had ever before been achieved.[13] Together with fellow staff-member Kent Ford, Rubin announced at a 1975 meeting of the American Astronomical Society the discovery that most stars in spiral galaxies orbit at roughly the same speed,[14] and that this implied that galaxy masses grow approximately linearly with radius well beyond the location of most of the stars (the galactic bulge). Rubin presented her results in an influential paper in 1980.[15] These results suggested either that Newtonian gravity does not apply universally or that, conservatively, upwards of 50% of the mass of galaxies was contained in the relatively dark galactic halo. Although initially met with skepticism, Rubin's results have been confirmed over the subsequent decades.[16]

If Newtonian mechanics is assumed to be correct, it would follow that most of the mass of the galaxy had to be in the galactic bulge near the center and that the stars and gas in the disk portion should orbit the center at decreasing velocities with radial distance from the galactic center (the dashed line in Fig. 1).

Observations of the rotation curve of spirals, however, do not bear this out. Rather, the curves do not decrease in the expected inverse square root relationship but are "flat", i.e. outside of the central bulge the speed is nearly a constant (the solid line in Fig. 1). It is also observed that galaxies with a uniform distribution of luminous matter have a rotation curve that rises from the center to the edge, and most low-surface-brightness galaxies (LSB galaxies) have the same anomalous rotation curve.

The rotation curves might be explained by hypothesizing the existence of a substantial amount of matter permeating the galaxy outside of the central bulge that is not emitting light in the mass-to-light ratio of the central bulge. The material responsible for the extra mass was dubbed dark matter, the existence of which was first posited in the 1930s by Jan Oort in his measurements of the Oort constants and Fritz Zwicky in his studies of the masses of galaxy clusters. The existence of non-baryonic cold dark matter (CDM) is today a major feature of the Lambda-CDM model that describes the cosmology of the universe.

Halo density profiles edit

In order to accommodate a flat rotation curve, a density profile for a galaxy and its environs must be different than one that is centrally concentrated. Newton's version of Kepler's Third Law implies that the spherically symmetric, radial density profile ρ(r) is:

 

where v(r) is the radial orbital velocity profile and G is the gravitational constant. This profile closely matches the expectations of a singular isothermal sphere profile where if v(r) is approximately constant then the density ρr−2 to some inner "core radius" where the density is then assumed constant. Observations do not comport with such a simple profile, as reported by Navarro, Frenk, and White in a seminal 1996 paper.[17]

The authors then remarked that a "gently changing logarithmic slope" for a density profile function could also accommodate approximately flat rotation curves over large scales. They found the famous Navarro–Frenk–White profile, which is consistent both with N-body simulations and observations given by

 

where the central density, ρ0, and the scale radius, Rs, are parameters that vary from halo to halo.[18] Because the slope of the density profile diverges at the center, other alternative profiles have been proposed, for example the Einasto profile, which has exhibited better agreement with certain dark matter halo simulations.[19][20]

Observations of orbit velocities in spiral galaxies suggest a mass structure according to:

 

with Φ the galaxy gravitational potential.

Since observations of galaxy rotation do not match the distribution expected from application of Kepler's laws, they do not match the distribution of luminous matter.[15] This implies that spiral galaxies contain large amounts of dark matter or, alternatively, the existence of exotic physics in action on galactic scales. The additional invisible component becomes progressively more conspicuous in each galaxy at outer radii and among galaxies in the less luminous ones.[clarification needed]

A popular interpretation of these observations is that about 26% of the mass of the Universe is composed of dark matter, a hypothetical type of matter which does not emit or interact with electromagnetic radiation. Dark matter is believed to dominate the gravitational potential of galaxies and clusters of galaxies. Under this theory, galaxies are baryonic condensations of stars and gas (namely hydrogen and helium) that lie at the centers of much larger haloes of dark matter, affected by a gravitational instability caused by primordial density fluctuations.

Many cosmologists strive to understand the nature and the history of these ubiquitous dark haloes by investigating the properties of the galaxies they contain (i.e. their luminosities, kinematics, sizes, and morphologies). The measurement of the kinematics (their positions, velocities and accelerations) of the observable stars and gas has become a tool to investigate the nature of dark matter, as to its content and distribution relative to that of the various baryonic components of those galaxies.

Further investigations edit

 
Comparison of rotating disc galaxies in the present day (left) and the distant Universe (right).[21]

The rotational dynamics of galaxies are well characterized by their position on the Tully–Fisher relation, which shows that for spiral galaxies the rotational velocity is uniquely related to their total luminosity. A consistent way to predict the rotational velocity of a spiral galaxy is to measure its bolometric luminosity and then read its rotation rate from its location on the Tully–Fisher diagram. Conversely, knowing the rotational velocity of a spiral galaxy gives its luminosity. Thus the magnitude of the galaxy rotation is related to the galaxy's visible mass.[22]

While precise fitting of the bulge, disk, and halo density profiles is a rather complicated process, it is straightforward to model the observables of rotating galaxies through this relationship.[23][better source needed] So, while state-of-the-art cosmological and galaxy formation simulations of dark matter with normal baryonic matter included can be matched to galaxy observations, there is not yet any straightforward explanation as to why the observed scaling relationship exists.[24][25] Additionally, detailed investigations of the rotation curves of low-surface-brightness galaxies (LSB galaxies) in the 1990s[26] and of their position on the Tully–Fisher relation[27] showed that LSB galaxies had to have dark matter haloes that are more extended and less dense than those of galaxies with high surface brightness, and thus surface brightness is related to the halo properties. Such dark-matter-dominated dwarf galaxies may hold the key to solving the dwarf galaxy problem of structure formation.

Very importantly, the analysis of the inner parts of low and high surface brightness galaxies showed that the shape of the rotation curves in the centre of dark-matter dominated systems indicates a profile different from the NFW spatial mass distribution profile.[28][29] This so-called cuspy halo problem is a persistent problem for the standard cold dark matter theory. Simulations involving the feedback of stellar energy into the interstellar medium in order to alter the predicted dark matter distribution in the innermost regions of galaxies are frequently invoked in this context.[30][31]

Alternatives to dark matter edit

There have been a number of attempts to solve the problem of galaxy rotation by modifying gravity without invoking dark matter. One of the most discussed is modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND), originally proposed by Mordehai Milgrom in 1983, which modifies the Newtonian force law at low accelerations to enhance the effective gravitational attraction. MOND has had a considerable amount of success in predicting the rotation curves of low-surface-brightness galaxies,[32] matching the baryonic Tully–Fisher relation,[33] and the velocity dispersions of the small satellite galaxies of the Local Group.[34]

Using data from the Spitzer Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves (SPARC) database, a group has found that the radial acceleration traced by rotation curves could be predicted just from the observed baryon distribution (that is, including stars and gas but not dark matter).[35] The same relation provided a good fit for 2693 samples in 153 rotating galaxies, with diverse shapes, masses, sizes, and gas fractions. Brightness in the near infrared, where the more stable light from red giants dominates, was used to estimate the density contribution due to stars more consistently. The results are consistent with MOND, and place limits on alternative explanations involving dark matter alone. However, cosmological simulations within a Lambda-CDM framework that include baryonic feedback effects reproduce the same relation, without the need to invoke new dynamics (such as MOND).[36] Thus, a contribution due to dark matter itself can be fully predictable from that of the baryons, once the feedback effects due to the dissipative collapse of baryons are taken into account. MOND is not a relativistic theory, although relativistic theories which reduce to MOND have been proposed, such as tensor–vector–scalar gravity (TeVeS),[5][37] scalar–tensor–vector gravity (STVG), and the f(R) theory of Capozziello and De Laurentis.[38]

A model of galaxy based on a general relativity metric was also proposed, showing that the rotation curves for the Milky Way, NGC 3031, NGC 3198 and NGC 7331 are consistent with the mass density distributions of the visible matter, avoiding the need for a massive halo of exotic dark matter.[39][40]

According to recent analysis of the data produced by the Gaia spacecraft, it would seem possible to explain at least the Milky Way's rotation curve without requiring any dark matter if instead of a Newtonian approximation the entire set of equations of general relativity is adopted.[41][42]

In March 2021, Gerson Otto Ludwig published a model based on general relativity that explains galaxy rotation curves with gravitoelectromagnetism.[43]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Corbelli, E.; Salucci, P. (2000). "The extended rotation curve and the dark matter halo of M33". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 311 (2): 441–447. arXiv:astro-ph/9909252. Bibcode:2000MNRAS.311..441C. doi:10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03075.x.
  2. ^ The explanation of the mass discrepancy in spiral galaxies by means of massive and extensive dark component was first put forward by A. Bosma in a PhD dissertation, see
    Bosma, A. (1978). The Distribution and Kinematics of Neutral Hydrogen in Spiral Galaxies of Various Morphological Types (PhD). Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Retrieved December 30, 2016 – via NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database.
    See also
    Rubin, V.; Thonnard, N.; Ford, W. K. Jr. (1980). "Rotational Properties of 21 Sc Galaxies With a Large Range of Luminosities and Radii from NGC 4605 (R=4kpc) to UGC 2885 (R=122kpc)". The Astrophysical Journal. 238: 471–487. Bibcode:1980ApJ...238..471R. doi:10.1086/158003.
    Begeman, K. G.; Broeils, A. H.; Sanders, R.H. (1991). "Extended Rotation Curves of Spiral Galaxies: Dark Haloes and Modified Dynamics". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 249 (3): 523–537. Bibcode:1991MNRAS.249..523B. doi:10.1093/mnras/249.3.523.
  3. ^ Hammond, Richard (May 1, 2008). The Unknown Universe: The Origin of the Universe, Quantum Gravity, Wormholes, and Other Things Science Still Can't Explain. Franklin Lakes, NJ: Career Press.
  4. ^ Bosma, A. (1978). The Distribution and Kinematics of Neutral Hydrogen in Spiral Galaxies of Various Morphological Types (PhD). Rijksuniversiteit Groningen. Retrieved December 30, 2016 – via NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database.
  5. ^ a b For an extensive discussion of the data and its fit to MOND see Milgrom, M. (2007). "The MOND Paradigm". arXiv:0801.3133 [astro-ph].
  6. ^ Oxford Dictionary of Scientists. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1999. ISBN 978-0-19-280086-2.
  7. ^ Babcock, H. W. (1939). "The rotation of the Andromeda Nebula". Lick Observatory Bulletin. 19: 41–51. Bibcode:1939LicOB..19...41B. doi:10.5479/ADS/bib/1939LicOB.19.41B.
  8. ^ Van de Hulst, H.C; et al. (1957). "Rotation and density distribution of the Andromeda nebula derived from observations of the 21-cm line". Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands. 14: 1. Bibcode:1957BAN....14....1V.
  9. ^ Schmidt, M (1957). "Rotation and density distribution of the Andromeda nebula derived from observations of the 21-cm line". Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands. 14: 17. Bibcode:1957BAN....14...17S.
  10. ^ Volders, L. (1959). "Neutral hydrogen in M 33 and M 101". Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands. 14 (492): 323. Bibcode:1959BAN....14..323V.
  11. ^ Oort, J.H. (1940), Some Problems Concerning the Structure and Dynamics of the Galactic System and the Elliptical Nebulae NGC 3115 and 4494
  12. ^ Shane, C. D. (1947). "1947PASP...59..182S Page 182". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 59 (349): 182. Bibcode:1947PASP...59..182S. doi:10.1086/125941.
  13. ^ Rubin, V.; Ford, W. K. Jr. (1970). "Rotation of the Andromeda Nebula from a Spectroscopic Survey of Emission Regions". The Astrophysical Journal. 159: 379. Bibcode:1970ApJ...159..379R. doi:10.1086/150317. S2CID 122756867.
  14. ^ Rubin, V.C.; Thonnard, N.; Ford, W.K. Jr. (1978). "Extended rotation curves of high-luminosity spiral galaxies. IV – Systematic dynamical properties, SA through SC". The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 225: L107–L111. Bibcode:1978ApJ...225L.107R. doi:10.1086/182804.
  15. ^ a b Rubin, V.; Thonnard, N.; Ford, W. K. Jr. (1980). "Rotational Properties of 21 Sc Galaxies with a Large Range of Luminosities and Radii from NGC 4605 (R=4kpc) to UGC 2885 (R=122kpc)". The Astrophysical Journal. 238: 471. Bibcode:1980ApJ...238..471R. doi:10.1086/158003.
  16. ^ Persic, M.; Salucci, P.; Stel, F. (1996). "The universal rotation curve of spiral galaxies – I. The dark matter connection". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 281 (1): 27–47. arXiv:astro-ph/9506004. Bibcode:1996MNRAS.281...27P. doi:10.1093/mnras/278.1.27.
  17. ^ Navarro, J. F.; Frenk, C. S.; White, S. D. M. (1996). "The Structure of Cold Dark Matter Halos". The Astrophysical Journal. 463: 563–575. arXiv:astro-ph/9508025. Bibcode:1996ApJ...462..563N. doi:10.1086/177173.
  18. ^ Ostlie, Dale A.; Carroll, Bradley W. (2017). An Introduction to Modern Astrophysics. Cambridge University Press. p. 918.
  19. ^ Merritt, D.; Graham, A.; Moore, B.; Diemand, J.; Terzić, B. (2006). "Empirical Models for Dark Matter Halos. I. Nonparametric Construction of Density Profiles and Comparison with Parametric Models". The Astronomical Journal. 132 (6): 2685–2700. arXiv:astro-ph/0509417. Bibcode:2006AJ....132.2685M. doi:10.1086/508988.
  20. ^ Merritt, D.; Navarro, J. F.; Ludlow, A.; Jenkins, A. (2005). "A Universal Density Profile for Dark and Luminous Matter?". The Astrophysical Journal. 624 (2): L85–L88. arXiv:astro-ph/0502515. Bibcode:2005ApJ...624L..85M. doi:10.1086/430636.
  21. ^ "Dark Matter Less Influential in Galaxies in Early Universe – VLT observations of distant galaxies suggest they were dominated by normal matter". www.eso.org. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  22. ^ Yegorova, I. A.; Salucci, P. (2007). "The radial Tully-Fisher relation for spiral galaxies – I". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 377 (2): 507–515. arXiv:astro-ph/0612434. Bibcode:2007MNRAS.377..507Y. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.11637.x. S2CID 17917374.
  23. ^ Dorminey, Bruce (30 Dec 2010). "Reliance on Indirect Evidence Fuels Dark Matter Doubts". Scientific American.
  24. ^ Weinberg, David H.; et, al. (2008). "Baryon Dynamics, Dark Matter Substructure, and Galaxies". The Astrophysical Journal. 678 (1): 6–21. arXiv:astro-ph/0604393. Bibcode:2008ApJ...678....6W. doi:10.1086/524646. S2CID 14893610.
  25. ^ Duffy, Alan R.; al., et (2010). "Impact of baryon physics on dark matter structures: a detailed simulation study of halo density profiles". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 405 (4): 2161–2178. arXiv:1001.3447. Bibcode:2010MNRAS.405.2161D. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2010.16613.x. S2CID 118517066.
  26. ^ de Blok, W. J. G.; McGaugh, S. (1997). "The dark and visible matter content of low surface brightness disc galaxies". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 290 (3): 533–552. arXiv:astro-ph/9704274. Bibcode:1997MNRAS.290..533D. doi:10.1093/mnras/290.3.533.
  27. ^ Zwaan, M. A.; van der Hulst, J. M.; de Blok, W. J. G.; McGaugh, S. S. (1995). "The Tully-Fisher relation for low surface brightness galaxies: implications for galaxy evolution". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 273 (2): L35–L38. arXiv:astro-ph/9501102. Bibcode:1995MNRAS.273L..35Z. doi:10.1093/mnras/273.1.l35.
  28. ^ Gentile, G.; Salucci, P.; Klein, U.; Vergani, D.; Kalberla, P. (2004). "The cored distribution of dark matter in spiral galaxies". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 351 (3): 903–922. arXiv:astro-ph/0403154. Bibcode:2004MNRAS.351..903G. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.07836.x. S2CID 14308775.
  29. ^ de Blok, W. J. G.; Bosma, A. (2002). "High-resolution rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies" (PDF). Astronomy & Astrophysics. 385 (3): 816–846. arXiv:astro-ph/0201276. Bibcode:2002A&A...385..816D. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20020080. S2CID 15880032.
  30. ^ Salucci, P.; De Laurentis, M. (2012). "Dark Matter in galaxies: Leads to its Nature" (PDF). Proceedings of Science (DSU 2012): 12. arXiv:1302.2268. Bibcode:2013arXiv1302.2268S.
  31. ^ de Blok, W. J. G. (2010). "The Core-Cusp Problem". Advances in Astronomy. 2010: 789293. arXiv:0910.3538. Bibcode:2010AdAst2010E...5D. doi:10.1155/2010/789293.
  32. ^ S. S. McGaugh; W. J. G. de Blok (1998). "Testing the Hypothesis of Modified Dynamics with Low Surface Brightness Galaxies and Other Evidence". Astrophysical Journal. 499 (1): 66–81. arXiv:astro-ph/9801102. Bibcode:1998ApJ...499...66M. doi:10.1086/305629. S2CID 18901029.
  33. ^ S. S. McGaugh (2011). "Novel Test of Modified Newtonian Dynamics with Gas Rich Galaxies". Physical Review Letters. 106 (12): 121303. arXiv:1102.3913. Bibcode:2011PhRvL.106l1303M. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.121303. PMID 21517295. S2CID 1427896.
  34. ^ S. S. McGaugh; M. Milgrom (2013). "Andromeda Dwarfs in Light of Modified Newtonian Dynamics". The Astrophysical Journal. 766 (1): 22. arXiv:1301.0822. Bibcode:2013ApJ...766...22M. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/766/1/22. S2CID 118576979.
  35. ^ Stacy McGaugh; Federico Lelli; Jim Schombert (2016). "The Radial Acceleration Relation in Rotationally Supported Galaxies". Physical Review Letters. 117 (20): 201101. arXiv:1609.05917. Bibcode:2016PhRvL.117t1101M. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.117.201101. PMID 27886485. S2CID 34521243.
  36. ^ Keller, B. W.; Wadsley, J. W. (23 January 2017). "Λ is Consistent with SPARC Radial Acceleration Relation". The Astrophysical Journal. 835 (1): L17. arXiv:1610.06183. Bibcode:2017ApJ...835L..17K. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/835/1/L17.
  37. ^ J. D. Bekenstein (2004). "Relativistic gravitation theory for the modified Newtonian dynamics paradigm". Physical Review D. 70 (8): 083509. arXiv:astro-ph/0403694. Bibcode:2004PhRvD..70h3509B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.70.083509.
  38. ^ J. W. Moffat (2006). "Scalar tensor vector gravity theory". Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics. 3 (3): 4. arXiv:gr-qc/0506021. Bibcode:2006JCAP...03..004M. doi:10.1088/1475-7516/2006/03/004. S2CID 17376981.,S. Capozziello; M. De Laurentis (2012). "The dark matter problem from f(R) gravity viewpoint". Annalen der Physik. 524 (9–10): 545–578. Bibcode:2012AnP...524..545C. doi:10.1002/andp.201200109.
  39. ^ Cooperstock, Fred I., and S. Tieu. "General relativity resolves galactic rotation without exotic dark matter." arXiv preprint astro-ph/0507619 (2005).
  40. ^ Cooperstock, F. I.; Tieu, S. (2007-05-20). "Galactic Dynamics Via General Relativity: A Compilation and New Developments". International Journal of Modern Physics A. 22 (13): 2293–2325. arXiv:astro-ph/0610370. Bibcode:2007IJMPA..22.2293C. doi:10.1142/S0217751X0703666X. ISSN 0217-751X. S2CID 155920.
  41. ^ Crosta, Mariateresa; Giammaria, Marco; Lattanzi, Mario G.; Poggio, Eloisa (August 2020). "On testing CDM and geometry-driven Milky Way rotation curve models with Gaia DR2". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 496 (2). OUP: 2107–2122. arXiv:1810.04445. doi:10.1093/mnras/staa1511.
  42. ^ Beordo, William; Crosta, Mariateresa; Lattanzi, Mario G.; Re Fiorentin, Paola; Spagna, Alessandro (April 2024). "Geometry-driven and dark-matter-sustained Milky Way rotation curves with Gaia DR3". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 529 (4). OUP: 4681–4698. doi:10.1093/mnras/stae855.
  43. ^ Ludwig, G. O. (2021-02-23). "Galactic rotation curve and dark matter according to gravitomagnetism". The European Physical Journal C. 81 (2): 186. Bibcode:2021EPJC...81..186L. doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-021-08967-3.

Further reading edit

  • Kuijken K.; Gilmore G. (1989). "The Mass Distribution in the Galactic Disc – III. The Local Volume Mass Density". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 239 (2): 651–664. Bibcode:1989MNRAS.239..651K. doi:10.1093/mnras/239.2.651. Primary research report discussing Oort limit, and citing original Oort 1932 study.

Bibliography edit

  • V. Rubin, V.; Ford Jr., W. K. (1970). "Rotation of the Andromeda Nebula from a Spectroscopic Survey of Emission Regions". Astrophysical Journal. 159: 379. Bibcode:1970ApJ...159..379R. doi:10.1086/150317. S2CID 122756867. This was the first detailed study of orbital rotation in galaxies.[according to whom?][citation needed]
  • V. Rubin; N. Thonnard; W. K. Ford Jr (1980). "Rotational Properties of 21 Sc Galaxies with a Large Range of Luminosities and Radii from NGC 4605 (R=4kpc) to UGC 2885 (R=122kpc)". Astrophysical Journal. 238: 471. Bibcode:1980ApJ...238..471R. doi:10.1086/158003. Observations of a set of spiral galaxies gave evidence that orbital velocities of stars in galaxies were unexpectedly high at large distances from the nucleus. This paper was influential in convincing astronomers that most of the matter in the universe is dark, and much of it is clumped about galaxies.[according to whom?][citation needed]
  • Galactic Astronomy, Dmitri Mihalas and Paul McRae.W. H. Freeman 1968.

External links edit

  • Bergstrom, Lars (2009). "Dark Matter Candidates". New Journal of Physics. 11 (10): 105006. arXiv:0903.4849. Bibcode:2009NJPh...11j5006B. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/11/10/105006. S2CID 204020148.
  • The Case Against Dark Matter. About Erik Verlinde's approach to the problem. (November 2016)

galaxy, rotation, curve, rotation, curve, disc, galaxy, also, called, velocity, curve, plot, orbital, speeds, visible, stars, that, galaxy, versus, their, radial, distance, from, that, galaxy, centre, typically, rendered, graphically, plot, data, observed, fro. The rotation curve of a disc galaxy also called a velocity curve is a plot of the orbital speeds of visible stars or gas in that galaxy versus their radial distance from that galaxy s centre It is typically rendered graphically as a plot and the data observed from each side of a spiral galaxy are generally asymmetric so that data from each side are averaged to create the curve A significant discrepancy exists between the experimental curves observed and a curve derived by applying gravity theory to the matter observed in a galaxy Theories involving dark matter are the main postulated solutions to account for the variance 3 Rotation curve of spiral galaxy Messier 33 yellow and blue points with error bars and a predicted one from distribution of the visible matter gray line The discrepancy between the two curves can be accounted for by adding a dark matter halo surrounding the galaxy 1 2 source source source source source Left A simulated galaxy without dark matter Right Galaxy with a flat rotation curve that would be expected with dark matter The rotational orbital speeds of galaxies stars do not follow the rules found in other orbital systems such as stars planets and planets moons that have most of their mass at the centre Stars revolve around their galaxy s centre at equal or increasing speed over a large range of distances In contrast the orbital velocities of planets in planetary systems and moons orbiting planets decline with distance according to Kepler s third law This reflects the mass distributions within those systems The mass estimations for galaxies based on the light they emit are far too low to explain the velocity observations 4 The galaxy rotation problem is the discrepancy between observed galaxy rotation curves and the theoretical prediction assuming a centrally dominated mass associated with the observed luminous material When mass profiles of galaxies are calculated from the distribution of stars in spirals and mass to light ratios in the stellar disks they do not match with the masses derived from the observed rotation curves and the law of gravity A solution to this conundrum is to hypothesize the existence of dark matter and to assume its distribution from the galaxy s center out to its halo Though dark matter is by far the most accepted explanation of the rotation problem other proposals have been offered with varying degrees of success Of the possible alternatives one of the most notable is modified Newtonian dynamics MOND which involves modifying the laws of gravity 5 Contents 1 History 2 Halo density profiles 3 Further investigations 4 Alternatives to dark matter 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 Further reading 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory editThis section needs additional citations to secondary or tertiary sourcessuch as review articles monographs or textbooks Please also establish the relevance for any primary research articles cited Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1932 Jan Hendrik Oort became the first to report that measurements of the stars in the solar neighborhood indicated that they moved faster than expected when a mass distribution based upon visible matter was assumed but these measurements were later determined to be essentially erroneous 6 In 1939 Horace Babcock reported in his PhD thesis measurements of the rotation curve for Andromeda which suggested that the mass to luminosity ratio increases radially 7 He attributed that to either the absorption of light within the galaxy or to modified dynamics in the outer portions of the spiral and not to any form of missing matter Babcock s measurements turned out to disagree substantially with those found later and the first measurement of an extended rotation curve in good agreement with modern data was published in 1957 by Henk van de Hulst and collaborators who studied M31 with the newly commissioned Dwingeloo 25 meter telescope 8 A companion paper by Maarten Schmidt showed that this rotation curve could be fit by a flattened mass distribution more extensive than the light 9 In 1959 Louise Volders used the same telescope to demonstrate that the spiral galaxy M33 also does not spin as expected according to Keplerian dynamics 10 Reporting on NGC 3115 Jan Oort wrote that the distribution of mass in the system appears to bear almost no relation to that of light one finds the ratio of mass to light in the outer parts of NGC 3115 to be about 250 11 On page 302 303 of his journal article he wrote that The strongly condensed luminous system appears imbedded in a large and more or less homogeneous mass of great density and although he went on to speculate that this mass may be either extremely faint dwarf stars or interstellar gas and dust he had clearly detected the dark matter halo of this galaxy The Carnegie telescope Carnegie Double Astrograph was intended to study this problem of Galactic rotation 12 In the late 1960s and early 1970s Vera Rubin an astronomer at the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism at the Carnegie Institution of Washington worked with a new sensitive spectrograph that could measure the velocity curve of edge on spiral galaxies to a greater degree of accuracy than had ever before been achieved 13 Together with fellow staff member Kent Ford Rubin announced at a 1975 meeting of the American Astronomical Society the discovery that most stars in spiral galaxies orbit at roughly the same speed 14 and that this implied that galaxy masses grow approximately linearly with radius well beyond the location of most of the stars the galactic bulge Rubin presented her results in an influential paper in 1980 15 These results suggested either that Newtonian gravity does not apply universally or that conservatively upwards of 50 of the mass of galaxies was contained in the relatively dark galactic halo Although initially met with skepticism Rubin s results have been confirmed over the subsequent decades 16 If Newtonian mechanics is assumed to be correct it would follow that most of the mass of the galaxy had to be in the galactic bulge near the center and that the stars and gas in the disk portion should orbit the center at decreasing velocities with radial distance from the galactic center the dashed line in Fig 1 Observations of the rotation curve of spirals however do not bear this out Rather the curves do not decrease in the expected inverse square root relationship but are flat i e outside of the central bulge the speed is nearly a constant the solid line in Fig 1 It is also observed that galaxies with a uniform distribution of luminous matter have a rotation curve that rises from the center to the edge and most low surface brightness galaxies LSB galaxies have the same anomalous rotation curve The rotation curves might be explained by hypothesizing the existence of a substantial amount of matter permeating the galaxy outside of the central bulge that is not emitting light in the mass to light ratio of the central bulge The material responsible for the extra mass was dubbed dark matter the existence of which was first posited in the 1930s by Jan Oort in his measurements of the Oort constants and Fritz Zwicky in his studies of the masses of galaxy clusters The existence of non baryonic cold dark matter CDM is today a major feature of the Lambda CDM model that describes the cosmology of the universe Halo density profiles editIn order to accommodate a flat rotation curve a density profile for a galaxy and its environs must be different than one that is centrally concentrated Newton s version of Kepler s Third Law implies that the spherically symmetric radial density profile r r is r r v r 24pGr2 1 2 dlog v r dlog r displaystyle rho r frac v r 2 4 pi Gr 2 left 1 2 frac d log v r d log r right nbsp where v r is the radial orbital velocity profile and G is the gravitational constant This profile closely matches the expectations of a singular isothermal sphere profile where if v r is approximately constant then the density r r 2 to some inner core radius where the density is then assumed constant Observations do not comport with such a simple profile as reported by Navarro Frenk and White in a seminal 1996 paper 17 The authors then remarked that a gently changing logarithmic slope for a density profile function could also accommodate approximately flat rotation curves over large scales They found the famous Navarro Frenk White profile which is consistent both with N body simulations and observations given by r r r0rRs 1 rRs 2 displaystyle rho r frac rho 0 frac r R s left 1 frac r R s right 2 nbsp where the central density r0 and the scale radius Rs are parameters that vary from halo to halo 18 Because the slope of the density profile diverges at the center other alternative profiles have been proposed for example the Einasto profile which has exhibited better agreement with certain dark matter halo simulations 19 20 Observations of orbit velocities in spiral galaxies suggest a mass structure according to v r rdFdr 1 2 displaystyle v r left r frac d Phi dr right 1 2 nbsp with F the galaxy gravitational potential Since observations of galaxy rotation do not match the distribution expected from application of Kepler s laws they do not match the distribution of luminous matter 15 This implies that spiral galaxies contain large amounts of dark matter or alternatively the existence of exotic physics in action on galactic scales The additional invisible component becomes progressively more conspicuous in each galaxy at outer radii and among galaxies in the less luminous ones clarification needed A popular interpretation of these observations is that about 26 of the mass of the Universe is composed of dark matter a hypothetical type of matter which does not emit or interact with electromagnetic radiation Dark matter is believed to dominate the gravitational potential of galaxies and clusters of galaxies Under this theory galaxies are baryonic condensations of stars and gas namely hydrogen and helium that lie at the centers of much larger haloes of dark matter affected by a gravitational instability caused by primordial density fluctuations Many cosmologists strive to understand the nature and the history of these ubiquitous dark haloes by investigating the properties of the galaxies they contain i e their luminosities kinematics sizes and morphologies The measurement of the kinematics their positions velocities and accelerations of the observable stars and gas has become a tool to investigate the nature of dark matter as to its content and distribution relative to that of the various baryonic components of those galaxies Further investigations edit nbsp Comparison of rotating disc galaxies in the present day left and the distant Universe right 21 The rotational dynamics of galaxies are well characterized by their position on the Tully Fisher relation which shows that for spiral galaxies the rotational velocity is uniquely related to their total luminosity A consistent way to predict the rotational velocity of a spiral galaxy is to measure its bolometric luminosity and then read its rotation rate from its location on the Tully Fisher diagram Conversely knowing the rotational velocity of a spiral galaxy gives its luminosity Thus the magnitude of the galaxy rotation is related to the galaxy s visible mass 22 While precise fitting of the bulge disk and halo density profiles is a rather complicated process it is straightforward to model the observables of rotating galaxies through this relationship 23 better source needed So while state of the art cosmological and galaxy formation simulations of dark matter with normal baryonic matter included can be matched to galaxy observations there is not yet any straightforward explanation as to why the observed scaling relationship exists 24 25 Additionally detailed investigations of the rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies LSB galaxies in the 1990s 26 and of their position on the Tully Fisher relation 27 showed that LSB galaxies had to have dark matter haloes that are more extended and less dense than those of galaxies with high surface brightness and thus surface brightness is related to the halo properties Such dark matter dominated dwarf galaxies may hold the key to solving the dwarf galaxy problem of structure formation Very importantly the analysis of the inner parts of low and high surface brightness galaxies showed that the shape of the rotation curves in the centre of dark matter dominated systems indicates a profile different from the NFW spatial mass distribution profile 28 29 This so called cuspy halo problem is a persistent problem for the standard cold dark matter theory Simulations involving the feedback of stellar energy into the interstellar medium in order to alter the predicted dark matter distribution in the innermost regions of galaxies are frequently invoked in this context 30 31 Alternatives to dark matter editThere have been a number of attempts to solve the problem of galaxy rotation by modifying gravity without invoking dark matter One of the most discussed is modified Newtonian dynamics MOND originally proposed by Mordehai Milgrom in 1983 which modifies the Newtonian force law at low accelerations to enhance the effective gravitational attraction MOND has had a considerable amount of success in predicting the rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies 32 matching the baryonic Tully Fisher relation 33 and the velocity dispersions of the small satellite galaxies of the Local Group 34 Using data from the Spitzer Photometry and Accurate Rotation Curves SPARC database a group has found that the radial acceleration traced by rotation curves could be predicted just from the observed baryon distribution that is including stars and gas but not dark matter 35 The same relation provided a good fit for 2693 samples in 153 rotating galaxies with diverse shapes masses sizes and gas fractions Brightness in the near infrared where the more stable light from red giants dominates was used to estimate the density contribution due to stars more consistently The results are consistent with MOND and place limits on alternative explanations involving dark matter alone However cosmological simulations within a Lambda CDM framework that include baryonic feedback effects reproduce the same relation without the need to invoke new dynamics such as MOND 36 Thus a contribution due to dark matter itself can be fully predictable from that of the baryons once the feedback effects due to the dissipative collapse of baryons are taken into account MOND is not a relativistic theory although relativistic theories which reduce to MOND have been proposed such as tensor vector scalar gravity TeVeS 5 37 scalar tensor vector gravity STVG and the f R theory of Capozziello and De Laurentis 38 A model of galaxy based on a general relativity metric was also proposed showing that the rotation curves for the Milky Way NGC 3031 NGC 3198 and NGC 7331 are consistent with the mass density distributions of the visible matter avoiding the need for a massive halo of exotic dark matter 39 40 According to recent analysis of the data produced by the Gaia spacecraft it would seem possible to explain at least the Milky Way s rotation curve without requiring any dark matter if instead of a Newtonian approximation the entire set of equations of general relativity is adopted 41 42 In March 2021 Gerson Otto Ludwig published a model based on general relativity that explains galaxy rotation curves with gravitoelectromagnetism 43 See also editList of unsolved problems in physics Long slit spectroscopy Nonsymmetric gravitational theoryFootnotes edit Corbelli E Salucci P 2000 The extended rotation curve and the dark matter halo of M33 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 311 2 441 447 arXiv astro ph 9909252 Bibcode 2000MNRAS 311 441C doi 10 1046 j 1365 8711 2000 03075 x The explanation of the mass discrepancy in spiral galaxies by means of massive and extensive dark component was first put forward by A Bosma in a PhD dissertation see Bosma A 1978 The Distribution and Kinematics of Neutral Hydrogen in Spiral Galaxies of Various Morphological Types PhD Rijksuniversiteit Groningen Retrieved December 30 2016 via NASA IPAC Extragalactic Database See also Rubin V Thonnard N Ford W K Jr 1980 Rotational Properties of 21 Sc Galaxies With a Large Range of Luminosities and Radii from NGC 4605 R 4kpc to UGC 2885 R 122kpc The Astrophysical Journal 238 471 487 Bibcode 1980ApJ 238 471R doi 10 1086 158003 Begeman K G Broeils A H Sanders R H 1991 Extended Rotation Curves of Spiral Galaxies Dark Haloes and Modified Dynamics Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 249 3 523 537 Bibcode 1991MNRAS 249 523B doi 10 1093 mnras 249 3 523 Hammond Richard May 1 2008 The Unknown Universe The Origin of the Universe Quantum Gravity Wormholes and Other Things Science Still Can t Explain Franklin Lakes NJ Career Press Bosma A 1978 The Distribution and Kinematics of Neutral Hydrogen in Spiral Galaxies of Various Morphological Types PhD Rijksuniversiteit Groningen Retrieved December 30 2016 via NASA IPAC Extragalactic Database a b For an extensive discussion of the data and its fit to MOND see Milgrom M 2007 The MOND Paradigm arXiv 0801 3133 astro ph Oxford Dictionary of Scientists Oxford Oxford University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0 19 280086 2 Babcock H W 1939 The rotation of the Andromeda Nebula Lick Observatory Bulletin 19 41 51 Bibcode 1939LicOB 19 41B doi 10 5479 ADS bib 1939LicOB 19 41B Van de Hulst H C et al 1957 Rotation and density distribution of the Andromeda nebula derived from observations of the 21 cm line Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands 14 1 Bibcode 1957BAN 14 1V Schmidt M 1957 Rotation and density distribution of the Andromeda nebula derived from observations of the 21 cm line Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands 14 17 Bibcode 1957BAN 14 17S Volders L 1959 Neutral hydrogen in M 33 and M 101 Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands 14 492 323 Bibcode 1959BAN 14 323V Oort J H 1940 Some Problems Concerning the Structure and Dynamics of the Galactic System and the Elliptical Nebulae NGC 3115 and 4494 Shane C D 1947 1947PASP 59 182S Page 182 Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 59 349 182 Bibcode 1947PASP 59 182S doi 10 1086 125941 Rubin V Ford W K Jr 1970 Rotation of the Andromeda Nebula from a Spectroscopic Survey of Emission Regions The Astrophysical Journal 159 379 Bibcode 1970ApJ 159 379R doi 10 1086 150317 S2CID 122756867 Rubin V C Thonnard N Ford W K Jr 1978 Extended rotation curves of high luminosity spiral galaxies IV Systematic dynamical properties SA through SC The Astrophysical Journal Letters 225 L107 L111 Bibcode 1978ApJ 225L 107R doi 10 1086 182804 a b Rubin V Thonnard N Ford W K Jr 1980 Rotational Properties of 21 Sc Galaxies with a Large Range of Luminosities and Radii from NGC 4605 R 4kpc to UGC 2885 R 122kpc The Astrophysical Journal 238 471 Bibcode 1980ApJ 238 471R doi 10 1086 158003 Persic M Salucci P Stel F 1996 The universal rotation curve of spiral galaxies I The dark matter connection Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 281 1 27 47 arXiv astro ph 9506004 Bibcode 1996MNRAS 281 27P doi 10 1093 mnras 278 1 27 Navarro J F Frenk C S White S D M 1996 The Structure of Cold Dark Matter Halos The Astrophysical Journal 463 563 575 arXiv astro ph 9508025 Bibcode 1996ApJ 462 563N doi 10 1086 177173 Ostlie Dale A Carroll Bradley W 2017 An Introduction to Modern Astrophysics Cambridge University Press p 918 Merritt D Graham A Moore B Diemand J Terzic B 2006 Empirical Models for Dark Matter Halos I Nonparametric Construction of Density Profiles and Comparison with Parametric Models The Astronomical Journal 132 6 2685 2700 arXiv astro ph 0509417 Bibcode 2006AJ 132 2685M doi 10 1086 508988 Merritt D Navarro J F Ludlow A Jenkins A 2005 A Universal Density Profile for Dark and Luminous Matter The Astrophysical Journal 624 2 L85 L88 arXiv astro ph 0502515 Bibcode 2005ApJ 624L 85M doi 10 1086 430636 Dark Matter Less Influential in Galaxies in Early Universe VLT observations of distant galaxies suggest they were dominated by normal matter www eso org Retrieved 16 March 2017 Yegorova I A Salucci P 2007 The radial Tully Fisher relation for spiral galaxies I Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 377 2 507 515 arXiv astro ph 0612434 Bibcode 2007MNRAS 377 507Y doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2007 11637 x S2CID 17917374 Dorminey Bruce 30 Dec 2010 Reliance on Indirect Evidence Fuels Dark Matter Doubts Scientific American Weinberg David H et al 2008 Baryon Dynamics Dark Matter Substructure and Galaxies The Astrophysical Journal 678 1 6 21 arXiv astro ph 0604393 Bibcode 2008ApJ 678 6W doi 10 1086 524646 S2CID 14893610 Duffy Alan R al et 2010 Impact of baryon physics on dark matter structures a detailed simulation study of halo density profiles Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 405 4 2161 2178 arXiv 1001 3447 Bibcode 2010MNRAS 405 2161D doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2010 16613 x S2CID 118517066 de Blok W J G McGaugh S 1997 The dark and visible matter content of low surface brightness disc galaxies Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 290 3 533 552 arXiv astro ph 9704274 Bibcode 1997MNRAS 290 533D doi 10 1093 mnras 290 3 533 Zwaan M A van der Hulst J M de Blok W J G McGaugh S S 1995 The Tully Fisher relation for low surface brightness galaxies implications for galaxy evolution Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 273 2 L35 L38 arXiv astro ph 9501102 Bibcode 1995MNRAS 273L 35Z doi 10 1093 mnras 273 1 l35 Gentile G Salucci P Klein U Vergani D Kalberla P 2004 The cored distribution of dark matter in spiral galaxies Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 351 3 903 922 arXiv astro ph 0403154 Bibcode 2004MNRAS 351 903G doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2004 07836 x S2CID 14308775 de Blok W J G Bosma A 2002 High resolution rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies PDF Astronomy amp Astrophysics 385 3 816 846 arXiv astro ph 0201276 Bibcode 2002A amp A 385 816D doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20020080 S2CID 15880032 Salucci P De Laurentis M 2012 Dark Matter in galaxies Leads to its Nature PDF Proceedings of Science DSU 2012 12 arXiv 1302 2268 Bibcode 2013arXiv1302 2268S de Blok W J G 2010 The Core Cusp Problem Advances in Astronomy 2010 789293 arXiv 0910 3538 Bibcode 2010AdAst2010E 5D doi 10 1155 2010 789293 S S McGaugh W J G de Blok 1998 Testing the Hypothesis of Modified Dynamics with Low Surface Brightness Galaxies and Other Evidence Astrophysical Journal 499 1 66 81 arXiv astro ph 9801102 Bibcode 1998ApJ 499 66M doi 10 1086 305629 S2CID 18901029 S S McGaugh 2011 Novel Test of Modified Newtonian Dynamics with Gas Rich Galaxies Physical Review Letters 106 12 121303 arXiv 1102 3913 Bibcode 2011PhRvL 106l1303M doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 106 121303 PMID 21517295 S2CID 1427896 S S McGaugh M Milgrom 2013 Andromeda Dwarfs in Light of Modified Newtonian Dynamics The Astrophysical Journal 766 1 22 arXiv 1301 0822 Bibcode 2013ApJ 766 22M doi 10 1088 0004 637X 766 1 22 S2CID 118576979 Stacy McGaugh Federico Lelli Jim Schombert 2016 The Radial Acceleration Relation in Rotationally Supported Galaxies Physical Review Letters 117 20 201101 arXiv 1609 05917 Bibcode 2016PhRvL 117t1101M doi 10 1103 physrevlett 117 201101 PMID 27886485 S2CID 34521243 Keller B W Wadsley J W 23 January 2017 L is Consistent with SPARC Radial Acceleration Relation The Astrophysical Journal 835 1 L17 arXiv 1610 06183 Bibcode 2017ApJ 835L 17K doi 10 3847 2041 8213 835 1 L17 J D Bekenstein 2004 Relativistic gravitation theory for the modified Newtonian dynamics paradigm Physical Review D 70 8 083509 arXiv astro ph 0403694 Bibcode 2004PhRvD 70h3509B doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 70 083509 J W Moffat 2006 Scalar tensor vector gravity theory Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics 3 3 4 arXiv gr qc 0506021 Bibcode 2006JCAP 03 004M doi 10 1088 1475 7516 2006 03 004 S2CID 17376981 S Capozziello M De Laurentis 2012 The dark matter problem from f R gravity viewpoint Annalen der Physik 524 9 10 545 578 Bibcode 2012AnP 524 545C doi 10 1002 andp 201200109 Cooperstock Fred I and S Tieu General relativity resolves galactic rotation without exotic dark matter arXiv preprint astro ph 0507619 2005 Cooperstock F I Tieu S 2007 05 20 Galactic Dynamics Via General Relativity A Compilation and New Developments International Journal of Modern Physics A 22 13 2293 2325 arXiv astro ph 0610370 Bibcode 2007IJMPA 22 2293C doi 10 1142 S0217751X0703666X ISSN 0217 751X S2CID 155920 Crosta Mariateresa Giammaria Marco Lattanzi Mario G Poggio Eloisa August 2020 On testing CDM and geometry driven Milky Way rotation curve models with Gaia DR2 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 496 2 OUP 2107 2122 arXiv 1810 04445 doi 10 1093 mnras staa1511 Beordo William Crosta Mariateresa Lattanzi Mario G Re Fiorentin Paola Spagna Alessandro April 2024 Geometry driven and dark matter sustained Milky Way rotation curves with Gaia DR3 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 529 4 OUP 4681 4698 doi 10 1093 mnras stae855 Ludwig G O 2021 02 23 Galactic rotation curve and dark matter according to gravitomagnetism The European Physical Journal C 81 2 186 Bibcode 2021EPJC 81 186L doi 10 1140 epjc s10052 021 08967 3 Further reading editKuijken K Gilmore G 1989 The Mass Distribution in the Galactic Disc III The Local Volume Mass Density Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 239 2 651 664 Bibcode 1989MNRAS 239 651K doi 10 1093 mnras 239 2 651 Primary research report discussing Oort limit and citing original Oort 1932 study Bibliography editV Rubin V Ford Jr W K 1970 Rotation of the Andromeda Nebula from a Spectroscopic Survey of Emission Regions Astrophysical Journal 159 379 Bibcode 1970ApJ 159 379R doi 10 1086 150317 S2CID 122756867 This was the first detailed study of orbital rotation in galaxies according to whom citation needed V Rubin N Thonnard W K Ford Jr 1980 Rotational Properties of 21 Sc Galaxies with a Large Range of Luminosities and Radii from NGC 4605 R 4kpc to UGC 2885 R 122kpc Astrophysical Journal 238 471 Bibcode 1980ApJ 238 471R doi 10 1086 158003 Observations of a set of spiral galaxies gave evidence that orbital velocities of stars in galaxies were unexpectedly high at large distances from the nucleus This paper was influential in convincing astronomers that most of the matter in the universe is dark and much of it is clumped about galaxies according to whom citation needed Galactic Astronomy Dmitri Mihalas and Paul McRae W H Freeman 1968 External links editBergstrom Lars 2009 Dark Matter Candidates New Journal of Physics 11 10 105006 arXiv 0903 4849 Bibcode 2009NJPh 11j5006B doi 10 1088 1367 2630 11 10 105006 S2CID 204020148 The Case Against Dark Matter About Erik Verlinde s approach to the problem November 2016 Portals nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Galaxy rotation curve amp oldid 1217844594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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