Modifying Gravity: You Can't Always Get What You Want
Glenn D. Starkman

TL;DR
This paper examines the challenges faced by modified gravity theories as alternatives to dark matter, highlighting their difficulties in explaining various astrophysical phenomena and suggesting they may ultimately need to incorporate dark matter concepts.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the theoretical and observational challenges in replacing dark matter with modified gravity, emphasizing the likelihood of hybrid models.
Findings
Modified gravity models struggle with galaxy cluster dynamics.
They cannot fully account for cosmological expansion effects.
Replacing dark matter with modified gravity may require incorporating dark matter itself.
Abstract
The combination of GR and the Standard Model disagrees with numerous observations on scales from our Solar System up. In the concordance model of cosmology, these contradictions are removed or alleviated by the introduction of three completely independent new components of stress-energy -- the inflaton, dark matter, and dark energy. Each of these in its turn is meant to have (or to currently) dominate the dynamics of the universe. There is still no non-gravitational evidence for any of these dark sectors; nor for the required extensions of the standard model. An alternative is to imagine that GR itself must be modified. Certain coincidences of scale even suggest that one might expect not to have to make three independent. Because they must address the most different types of data, attempts to replace dark matter with modified gravity are the most controversial. A phenomenological model…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
