The Baryonic Tully-Fisher Relationship: A consequence of Newtonian Gravitation acting in a hierarchical Universe
David Roscoe

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the Baryonic Tully-Fisher Relationship naturally arises from Newtonian gravity within a hierarchically structured universe, suggesting a fundamental link between cosmic structure and galaxy dynamics.
Contribution
It shows that the BTFR can be derived as a consequence of hierarchical distribution of matter and Newtonian gravity, offering a new theoretical perspective.
Findings
BTFR emerges from hierarchical matter distribution and Newtonian gravity.
The model predicts a scaling relation V^4 ∼ M for galaxy velocities.
Hierarchical symmetry breaking influences galaxy formation and dynamics.
Abstract
It has been reported that the application of convolutional neural-network techniques to infer the Dark Matter distribution in the local IGM has revealed how it follows the hierarchical distribution of galaxies in the locality, rather than exhibiting homogeneity. This result makes it natural to consider the possibility that, on scales at least as big as , the distribution of all material comprising the local IGM is hierarchically distributed. Given this possibility, any model of galaxy formation must then involve a process in which all of the hierarchically distributed material within a sphere coalesces about a unique center so that hierarchical symmetry is broken on the scale . In the particular case of the hierarchical distribution being quasi-fractal in the local cosmos then, for circular velocity on , the scaling…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComputational Physics and Python Applications · Statistical Mechanics and Entropy · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis
