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arxiv: 2109.08505 · v1 · pith:W76QVA62new · submitted 2021-09-16 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA · gr-qc

Elongated Gravity Sources as an Analytical Limit for Flat Galaxy Rotation Curves

classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA gr-qc
keywords galaxyrotationanalyticalcurvesgalacticlimitprolatescales
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The flattening of spiral-galaxy rotation curves is unnatural in view of the expectations from Kepler's third law and a central mass. It is interesting, however, that the radius-independence velocity is what one expects in one less dimension. In our three-dimensional space, the rotation curve is natural if, outside the galaxy's center, the gravitational potential corresponds to that of a very prolate ellipsoid, filament, string, or otherwise cylindrical structure perpendicular to the galactic plane. While there is observational evidence (and numerical simulations) for filamentary structure at large scales, this has not been discussed at scales commensurable with galactic sizes. If, nevertheless, the hypothesis is tentatively adopted, the scaling exponent of the baryonic Tully--Fisher relation due to accretion of visible matter by the halo comes out to reasonably be 4. At a minimum, this analytical limit would suggest that simulations yielding prolate haloes would provide a better overall fit to small-scale galaxy data.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Fractional-Dimension Gravity and the Milky Way Galaxy

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    Fractional-Dimension Gravity reproduces Milky Way rotation curves via a variable dimension D(R) fitted to Gaia data without dark matter.