Deficient Reasoning for Dark Matter in Galaxies
James Q. Feng, C. F. Gallo

TL;DR
This paper argues that the discrepancy between luminous and gravitational mass in galaxies, often attributed to dark matter, may be due to measurement uncertainties and baryonic matter sufficiency, challenging the need for non-baryonic dark matter.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that baryonic matter alone can explain galactic rotation curves using thin-disk models, questioning the necessity of dark matter.
Findings
Galactic mass density peaks at the center and declines exponentially.
Predicted mass density aligns with observed interstellar medium.
Baryonic matter may suffice to explain rotation curves.
Abstract
Astronomers have been using the measured luminosity to estimate the {\em luminous mass} of stars, based on empirically established mass-to-light ratio which seems to be only applicable to a special class of stars---the main-sequence stars---with still considerable uncertainties. Another basic tool to determine the mass of a system of stars or galaxies comes from the study of their motion, as Newton demonstrated with his law of gravitation, which yields the {\em gravitational mass}. Because the luminous mass can at best only represent a portion of the gravitational mass, finding the luminous mass to be different or less than the gravitational mass should not be surprising. Using such an apparent discrepancy as a compelling evidence for the so-called dark matter, which has been believed to possess mysterious nonbaryonic properties and present a dominant amount in galaxies and the…
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