Field-theoretical formulations of MOND-like gravity
Jean-Philippe Bruneton, Gilles Esposito-Farese

TL;DR
This paper critically reviews various field-theoretical models of MOND-like gravity, highlighting their difficulties, fine-tuning issues, and instabilities, while suggesting potential directions for improvement.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive critique of existing MOND models, introduces new theoretical challenges, and explores alternative frameworks like TeVeS for more viable gravity modifications.
Findings
Many MOND-like models are fine-tuned and unstable.
Field equations often lose hyperbolicity within matter.
Some models can explain the Pioneer anomaly without conflicting with GR tests.
Abstract
Modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND) is a possible way to explain the flat galaxy rotation curves without invoking the existence of dark matter. It is however quite difficult to predict such a phenomenology in a consistent field theory, free of instabilities and admitting a well-posed Cauchy problem. We examine critically various proposals of the literature, and underline their successes and failures both from the experimental and the field-theoretical viewpoints. We exhibit new difficulties in both cases, and point out the hidden fine tuning of some models. On the other hand, we show that several published no-go theorems are based on hypotheses which may be unnecessary, so that the space of possible models is a priori larger. We examine a new route to reproduce the MOND physics, in which the field equations are particularly simple outside matter. However, the analysis of the field…
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