
TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive overview of MOND theory, discussing its foundational principles, predictions, various formulations, and potential connections to cosmology, while highlighting its limitations and avenues for future research.
Contribution
It offers a detailed synthesis of MOND theories, including nonrelativistic and relativistic models, and explores new approaches aiming to derive MOND from deeper principles.
Findings
MOND predicts scale-invariant dynamics below a0.
Relativistic MOND theories can model gravitational lensing.
Current theories do not fully explain cosmological mass discrepancies.
Abstract
A general account of MOND theory is given. I start with the basic tenets of MOND, which posit departure from standard dynamics in the limit of low acceleration -- below an acceleration constant a0 -- where dynamics become scale invariant. I list some of the salient predictions of these tenets. The special role of a0 and its significance are then discussed. In particular, I stress its coincidence with cosmologically relevant accelerations. The deep-MOND limit and the consequences of its scale invariance are considered in some detail. General aspects of MOND theories are then described, after which I list briefly presently known theories, both nonrelativistic and relativistic. Most full-fledged theories modify the gravitational action, hinge on a0, introduce an interpolating function between the low and high accelerations, and obey MOND requirements in the opposite limits. These…
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