Wide Binaries, Retardation and the External Field Effect
Asher Yahalom

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the gravitational anomaly observed in wide binaries can be explained by general relativity's external field effect, potentially eliminating the need for modified gravity theories like MOND.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the wide binary anomaly can be explained within Einstein-Newton general relativity through the external field effect, without modifying the standard theory.
Findings
The 5 kau separation scale naturally arises from the external field effect.
The anomaly can be explained without invoking modified gravity theories.
Retarded gravity effects are not significant in the solar system.
Abstract
A low acceleration gravitational anomaly was reported for wide binaries: two binary stars which are separated by more than five kilo astronomical units (kau). The increase in gravitational force was reported to be about greater than Newtonian gravity. At the same time binaries separated less than one kau were shown to obey standard Newtonian gravity. A possible explanation for this was given in the framework of MOND correction to gravity which is applicable for low acceleration. However, it was noticed that the explanation is only adequate in the framework of Milgromian AQUAL theory which considers the "external field effect" that is the effect of the gravitational field of the rest of the galaxy on the binary system. Recently it was shown that many "anomalous gravity" effects can be explained in the framework of general relativity and its weak field approximation. It was shown…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory
