Understanding the Radial Acceleration Relation of Dwarf Galaxies with Emergent Gravity
We examine whether the radial acceleration relation (RAR) of dwarf galaxies can be explained by Verlinde's emergent gravity. This is the extension of arXiv:2206.11685v3, which examines the RAR of typical spiral galaxies, to less massive systems. To do this, we compile the line-of-sight velocity...
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Zusammenfassung: | We examine whether the radial acceleration relation (RAR) of dwarf galaxies
can be explained by Verlinde's emergent gravity. This is the extension of
arXiv:2206.11685v3, which examines the RAR of typical spiral galaxies, to less
massive systems. To do this, we compile the line-of-sight velocity dispersion
profiles of 30 dwarf galaxies in the Local Group from the literature. We then
calculate the expected gravitational acceleration from the stellar component in
the framework of the emergent gravity, and compare it with that from
observations. The calculated acceleration with the emergent gravity under the
assumption of a quasi-de Sitter universe agrees with the observed one within
the uncertainty. Our results suggest that the emergent gravity can explain the
kinematics of galaxies without introducing dark matter, even for less massive
galaxies where dark matter is expected to dominate. This sharply contrasts with
MOND, where a new interpolating function has to be introduced for dwarf
galaxies to explain their kinematics without dark matter. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.16655 |