MODIFIED DYNAMICS (MOND) AS A DARK HALO

RH SANDERS*, KG BEGEMAN

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We propose a form for dark haloes that embodies the fundamental aspect of Milgrom's modified dynamics (MOND): the discrepancy between the visible mass and the Newtonian dynamical mass appears below a critical acceleration. This is a halo having a density distribution, at least to several tens of kpc, of the form Sigma(0)/r, where Sigma(0), is a constant of surface density which does not vary from galaxy to galaxy. To avoid rising rotation curves, such a density distribution must obviously steepen beyond some radius, and we have chosen the Hernquist model in which the density falls as 1/r(4) beyond a characteristic scale. We show that, assuming that the visible (baryonic) matter is some constant fraction of the dark matter, spiral galaxies with such haloes exhibit a Tully-Fisher law of the observed form. In a sample of 10 spiral galaxies with well-determined extended rotation curves this halo, combined with the observable matter, can successfully model the observed curves. Moreover, in the seven most luminous galaxies, the best-fitting models have about the same value of Sigma(0) and are effectively one-parameter fits as in MOND (mass-to-light of the visible disc). The one-parameter description, however, does break down for the three dwarf galaxies in the sample with the lowest internal accelerations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)360-366
Number of pages7
JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume266
Issue number2
Publication statusPublished - 15-Jan-1994

Keywords

  • CELESTIAL MECHANICS, STELLAR DYNAMICS
  • GALAXIES, KINEMATICS AND DYNAMICS
  • GALAXIES, SPIRAL
  • MISSING MASS PROBLEM
  • ROTATION CURVES
  • SPIRAL GALAXIES
  • NEWTONIAN DYNAMICS
  • MATTER
  • GRAVITY

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