The effect of an expanding universe on massive objects
Roshina Nandra, Anthony N. Lasenby, Michael P. Hobson

TL;DR
This paper explores how an accelerating universe influences the maximum size and stability of massive objects like galaxies and clusters, providing theoretical constraints and implications for future cosmic evolution.
Contribution
It introduces new radii defining the maximum size and stability of massive objects in an expanding universe, linking cosmological expansion to astrophysical object scales.
Findings
Identifies two key radii, $r_F$ and $r_S$, that constrain galaxy and cluster sizes.
Shows these radii align with observed velocity fields around nearby galaxies.
Predicts the timing of gravitational unbinding of objects before a Big Rip scenario.
Abstract
We present some astrophysical consequences of the metric for a point mass in an expanding universe derived in Nandra, Lasenby & Hobson, and of the associated invariant expression for the force required to keep a test particle at rest relative to the central mass. We focus on the effect of an expanding universe on massive objects on the scale of galaxies and clusters. Using Newtonian and general-relativistic approaches, we identify two important time-dependent physical radii for such objects when the cosmological expansion is accelerating. The first radius, , is that at which the total radial force on a test particle is zero, which is also the radius of the largest possible circular orbit about the central mass and where the gas pressure and its gradient vanish. The second radius, , which is \approx r_F/1.6$, is that of the largest possible stable circular orbit, which we…
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