Testing Newtonian gravity with distant globular clusters: NGC1851 and NGC1904
R. Scarpa, G. Marconi, G. Carraro, R. Falomo, S. Villanova

TL;DR
This study tests Newtonian gravity in globular clusters by measuring velocity dispersion profiles, finding they remain constant beyond a certain radius, which challenges classical gravity and suggests possible new physics.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence from two distant globular clusters supporting the breakdown of Newtonian dynamics at low accelerations.
Findings
Velocity dispersion becomes constant beyond radius r0 in both clusters.
Results align with previous findings in five other globular clusters.
Supports the hypothesis of modified gravity at low accelerations.
Abstract
Globular clusters are useful to test the validity of Newtonian dynamics in the low acceleration regime typical of galaxies, without the complications of non-baryonic dark matter. Specifically, in absence of disturbing effects, e.g. tidal heating, their velocity dispersion is expected to vanish at large radii. If such behaviour is not observed, and in particular if, as observed in elliptical galaxies, the dispersion is found constant at large radii below a certain threshold acceleration, this might indicate a break down of Newtonian dynamics. To minimise the effects of tidal heating in this paper we study the velocity dispersion profile of two distant globular clusters, NGC 1851 and NGC 1904. The velocity dispersion profile is derived from accurate radial velocities measurements, obtained at the ESO 8m VLT telescope. Reliable data for 184 and 146 bona fide cluster star members,…
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