Constraining A String Gauge Field by Galaxy Rotation Curves and Perihelion Precession of Planets
Yeuk-Kwan E. Cheung, Feng Xu

TL;DR
This paper investigates a string gauge field model that explains galaxy rotation curves and planetary perihelion precession, offering an alternative to dark matter with promising fits to observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a one-parameter string gauge field model that fits galaxy rotation curves and explains the Tully-Fisher relation, providing a new alternative to dark matter.
Findings
String model fits galaxy rotation curves as well as NFW dark matter profile.
Derived a relation between string field strength, galaxy size, and luminosity.
String field strength in the solar system is comparable to that needed for galactic rotation speeds.
Abstract
We discuss a cosmological model in which the string gauge field coupled universally to matter gives rise to an extra centripetal force and will have observable signatures on cosmological and astronomical observations. Several tests are performed using data including galaxy rotation curves of 22 spiral galaxies of varied luminosities and sizes, and perihelion precessions of planets in the solar system. The rotation curves of the same group of galaxies are independently fit using a dark matter model with the generalized Navarro--Frenk--White (NFW) profile and the string model. A Remarkable fit of galaxy rotation curves is achieved using the one-parameter string model as compared to the three-parameter dark matter model with the NFW profile. The average value of the NFW fit is 9\% better than that of the string model at a price of two more free parameters. Furthermore, from the…
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