Galaxies as simple dynamical systems: observational data disfavor dark matter and stochastic star formation
Pavel Kroupa (Bonn)

TL;DR
This paper challenges the standard cosmological model by presenting observational evidence that disfavors dark matter and stochastic star formation, supporting alternative gravity theories and a universe without dark matter.
Contribution
It provides observational and theoretical evidence against dark matter, proposing a non-Newtonian gravity framework and a new understanding of galaxy formation and evolution.
Findings
Dual dwarf galaxy theorem contradicts data under SMoC
Satellite galaxy distributions are anisotropic, inconsistent with SMoC
Galaxy dynamics are well described by scale-invariant, Milgromian physics
Abstract
(Abridged) Galaxies are observed to be simple systems but the standard model of cosmology (SMoC) implies a haphazard merger history driven by dynamical friction on dark matter halos. The SMoC is tested here with the results that the dual dwarf galaxy theorem is in contradiction to the data if the SMoC is true, and the action of dynamical friction is not evident in the galaxy population. A consistency test for this conclusion comes from the significantly anisotropic distributions of satellite galaxies. Independently, the long history of failures of the SMoC have the likelihood that it describes the observed Universe to less than 10^-4 per cent. The implication for fundamental physics is that exotic dark matter particles do not exist and that consequently effective gravitational physics on the scales of galaxies and beyond ought to be non-Newtonian/non-Einsteinian. The data imply that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
