Conformal gravity does not predict flat galaxy rotation curves
Michael Hobson, Anthony Lasenby

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that conformal gravity's Mannheim--Kazanas solution does not predict flat galaxy rotation curves when considering the dynamical generation of particle mass and scalar field effects, challenging previous assumptions.
Contribution
It clarifies the impact of scalar fields and conformal frames on rotation curve predictions in conformal gravity, showing no flat rotation curves arise in physically consistent frames.
Findings
Rotation curves are not flat in the physically relevant conformal frame.
Scalar field interactions alter the spacetime metric from the MK vacuum.
Massive particles follow geodesics of the Schwarzschild-de Sitter metric, not the MK vacuum.
Abstract
We reconsider the widely held view that the Mannheim--Kazanas (MK) vacuum solution for a static, spherically-symmetric system in conformal gravity (CG) predicts flat rotation curves, such as those observed in galaxies, without the need for dark matter. This prediction assumes that test particles have fixed rest mass and follow timelike geodesics in the MK metric in the vacuum region exterior to a spherically-symmetric representation of the galactic mass distribution. Such geodesics are not conformally invariant, however, which leads to an apparent discrepancy with the analogous calculation performed in the conformally-equivalent Schwarzschild-de-Sitter (SdS) metric, where the latter does not predict flat rotation curves. This difference arises since the mass of particles in CG must instead be generated dynamically through interaction with a scalar field. The energy-momentum of this…
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