Testing MOND gravity in the shell galaxy NGC 3923
Michal Bilek, Bruno Jungwiert, Lucie Jilkova, Ivana Ebrova, Katerina, Bartoskova, Miroslav Krizek

TL;DR
This study tests the consistency of the observed shell distribution in galaxy NGC 3923 with MOND gravity, using updated observational data and a multi-generation shell formation model, finding strong agreement for most shells.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed MOND-based modeling of NGC 3923's shell system with current data, supporting MOND's viability in explaining shell structures.
Findings
25 out of 27 shells are well reproduced within 5% deviation
A multi-generation shell formation scenario is supported by the data
The model aligns with the observed shell distribution using updated galaxy mass profile
Abstract
Context. The elliptical galaxy NGC 3923 is surrounded by numerous stellar shells that are concentric arcs centered on the galactic core. They are very likely a result of a minor merger and they consist of stars in nearly radial orbits. For a given potential, the shell radii at a given time after the merger can be calculated and compared to observations. The Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) is a theory that aims to solve the missing mass problem by modifying the laws of classical dynamics in the limit of small accelerations. Hernquist & Quinn(1987) claimed that the shell distribution of NGC 3923 contradicted MOND, but Milgrom(1988) found several substantial insufficiencies in their work. Aims. We test whether the observed shell distribution in NGC 3923 is consistent with MOND using the current observational knowledge of the shell number and positions and of the host galaxy surface…
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