Barred spiral galaxies in modified gravity theories
Mahmood Roshan, Indranil Banik, Neda Ghafourian, Ingo Thies, Benoit, Famaey, Elena Asencio, Pavel Kroupa

TL;DR
This paper compares galaxy bar dynamics in standard dark matter models and extended gravity theories, finding that extended gravity models naturally produce faster bars consistent with observations, unlike dark matter simulations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that extended gravity theories predict faster, weaker bars and resolve the tension with observed bar pattern speeds, unlike standard dark matter models.
Findings
Extended gravity models predict weaker, faster bars.
Dark matter simulations show slower bars due to dynamical friction.
Extended gravity models align better with observed fast bar pattern speeds.
Abstract
When bars form within galaxy formation simulations in the standard cosmological context, dynamical friction with dark matter (DM) causes them to rotate rather slowly. However, almost all observed galactic bars are fast in terms of the ratio between corotation radius and bar length. Here, we explicitly display an tension between the observed distribution of this ratio and that in the EAGLE simulation at redshift 0. We also compare the evolution of Newtonian galactic discs embedded in DM haloes to their evolution in three extended gravity theories: Milgromian Dynamics (MOND), a model of non-local gravity, and a scalar-tensor-vector gravity theory (MOG). Although our models start with the same initial baryonic distribution and rotation curve, the long-term evolution is different. The bar instability happens more violently in MOND compared to the other models. There are some…
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.
