Galactic mapping with general relativity and the observed rotation curves
Nadja S. Magalhaes, Fred I. Cooperstock

TL;DR
This paper uses general relativity to accurately model galactic rotation curves and density profiles, providing predictions consistent with observations and suggesting larger galaxy sizes than previously thought.
Contribution
It demonstrates the successful application of general relativity to galactic dynamics, offering new predictions on galaxy sizes and mass distributions without dark matter.
Findings
GR accurately models galactic velocity profiles
Predicted larger size of the Milky Way confirmed by recent observations
Galactic masses are higher than baryonic mass but lower than dark matter models
Abstract
Typically, stars in galaxies have higher velocities than predicted by Newtonian gravity in conjunction with observable galactic matter. To account for the phenomenon, some researchers modified Newtonian gravitation; others introduced dark matter in the context of Newtonian gravity. We employed general relativity successfully to describe the galactic velocity profiles of four galaxies: NGC 2403, NGC 2903, NGC 5055 and the Milky Way. Here we map the density contours of the galaxies, achieving good concordance with observational data. In our Solar neighbourhood, we found a mass density and density fall-off fitting observational data satisfactorily. From our GR results, using the threshold density related to the observed optical zone of a galaxy, we had found that the Milky Way was indicated to be considerably larger than had been believed to be the case. To our knowledge, this was the only…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Experimental and Theoretical Physics Studies
