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MUSE-DARK III: The evolution of the radial acceleration relation at intermediate redshifts
Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 10:42 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The radial acceleration relation in galaxies shows a higher characteristic scale at higher redshifts.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The radial acceleration relation persists in the intermediate-redshift sample but is offset from the local relation, with a characteristic acceleration scale a0(z~1) = 2.38 ± 0.1 × 10^{-10} m s^{-2} and an intrinsic scatter of ~0.17 dex. When the sample is divided into redshift bins the scale rises systematically with z. Parametrizing the dependence as a0(z) = a0(0) + a1 z yields a1 = 1.59 ± 0.1 × 10^{-10} m s^{-2}, giving evidence for redshift evolution. The same trend is recovered when different dark matter halo profiles are adopted or when the analysis is performed within the Modified Newtonian Dynamics framework.
What carries the argument
Three-dimensional forward modeling of disk-halo decomposition that derives the intrinsic observed and baryonic radial accelerations from MUSE data cubes, including pressure-support corrections.
If this is right
- The radial acceleration relation continues to exist at lookback times up to roughly eight billion years.
- The characteristic acceleration scale increases linearly with redshift.
- The scatter around the relation is larger than the value measured in the local universe.
- The evolution signal remains when the analysis is repeated with alternate dark matter halo profiles or within the Modified Newtonian Dynamics framework.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the linear rise in the characteristic scale continues, observations at redshifts above 1.5 should show still larger values and would provide a direct test of the trend.
- The increase could reflect higher levels of gas turbulence or different feedback regimes in younger galaxies that alter the effective gravitational acceleration.
- Galaxy formation simulations could be checked against this redshift-dependent shift to see whether they reproduce the changing link between baryons and total acceleration.
Load-bearing premise
The three-dimensional forward modeling with disk-halo decomposition accurately recovers the intrinsic accelerations without significant systematic bias from the choice of dark matter halo profile or sample selection.
What would settle it
Independent measurements of the radial acceleration relation at z ~ 1 using a different instrument or modeling pipeline that recover a characteristic scale matching the local value would contradict the reported linear increase with redshift.
Figures
read the original abstract
The radial acceleration relation (RAR) is a tight empirical correlation between the observed radial acceleration (a_tot) and the baryonic radial acceleration (a_bar) measured across galaxy radii: these two accelerations start to deviate significantly from each other below a characteristic acceleration scale, a0. So far, observational studies of the RAR have predominantly focused on galaxies in the local Universe, leaving its evolution with cosmic time largely unexplored. Using high signal-to-noise data from the MUSE Hubble Ultra Deep Field survey, we investigate the RAR with a sample of 79 star-forming galaxies (complete above M* >10^8.8 Msun) at intermediate redshifts (0.33 <z <1.44). We estimate the observed intrinsic acceleration and the baryonic acceleration from a disk-halo decomposition that incorporates stellar, gas, and dark matter components, with corrections for pressure support, using 3D forward modelling. We find a RAR in our intermediate-z sample offset from the local relation, with a higher characteristic acceleration scale, a0(z~1) = 2.38+/-0.1* 10^-10 m/s^2, and a larger intrinsic scatter (~0.17 dex). Dividing the sample into redshift bins and refitting the RAR in each bin, we find a characteristic acceleration scale that systematically increases with z. Parametrizing the z-dependence as a0(z)= a0(0) + a1 * z, we obtain a1 = 1.59+/-0.1 *10^-10 m/s^2, providing evidence for a z-evolution. We find similar results using various dark matter halo profiles as well as the Modified Newtonian Dynamics framework in our 3D forward modelling. Our results show that the RAR persists at intermediate redshift, with statistically significant redshift evolution of the characteristic acceleration, pointing to a possible evolution of the baryon-missing mass connection over cosmic time.
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