The Cosmological Decrease of Galactic Density and the Induced Retarded Gravity Effect on Rotation Curves release_i4kn42bz7nh2xnohqmr2j5yv2i

by Asher Yahalom

Released as a post by MDPI AG.

2021  

Abstract

Galaxies are huge physical systems having dimensions of many tens of thousands of light years. Thus any change at the galactic center will be noticed at the rim only tens of thousands of years later. Those retardation effects seems to be neglected in present day galactic modelling used to calculate rotational velocities of matter in the rims of the galaxy and surrounding gas. The significant differences between the predictions of Newtonian instantaneous action at a distance and observed velocities are usually explained by either assuming dark matter or by modifying the laws of gravity (MOND). In this paper we will show that taking general relativity seriously without neglecting retardation effects one can explain the radial velocities of galactic matter without postulating dark matter. However, this will rely on a temporal change of galactic mass. We will compare two different mechanisms of density change, one is local, that is accretion of matter from the intergalactic medium. The other is global, that is the cosmological decrease of density due to the cosmic expansion. It will be shown that local effects are much more important in this respect.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   547.8 kB
file_mr5gasxx35eipk23soonclnula
www.preprints.org (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  post
Stage   unknown
Date   2021-02-02
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: 0b218f96-a6c2-492d-88a6-bc9ee8336365
API URL: JSON