On the galactic rotation curves problem within an axisymmetric approach
Cesar Alvarez, Olindo Corradini, Alfredo Herrera-Aguilar, Ulises, Nucamendi, Eli Santos

TL;DR
This paper extends a kinematic approach to galactic rotation curves from spherical to axisymmetric spacetimes, accounting for galaxy rotation and gravitational dragging effects, and discusses observational challenges.
Contribution
It generalizes the spherical symmetry method to stationary axisymmetric metrics, incorporating galaxy rotation and frame dragging into the analysis of rotation curves.
Findings
Expresses red/blue shifts in terms of three metric functions.
Distinguishes between red and blue shifts due to galaxy rotation.
Highlights observational challenges in determining metric functions.
Abstract
In U. Nucamendi et al. Phys. Rev. D63 (2001) 125016 and K. Lake, Phys. Rev. Lett. 92 (2004) 051101 it has been shown that galactic potentials can be kinematically linked to the observed red/blue shifts of the corresponding galactic rotation curves under a minimal set of assumptions: the emitted photons come from stable timelike circular geodesic orbits of stars in a static spherically symmetric gravitational field, and propagate to us along null geodesics. It is remarkable that this relation can be established without appealing at all to a concrete theory of gravitational interaction. Here we generalize this kinematical spherically symmetric approach to the galactic rotation curves problem to the stationary axisymmetric realm since this is precisely the symmetry that spiral galaxies possess. Thus, by making use of the most general stationary axisymmetric metric, we also consider stable…
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