Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND)
Benoit Famaey, Amel Durakovic

TL;DR
MOND proposes a modification to Newtonian dynamics at low accelerations, successfully explaining galactic rotation curves and the Radial Acceleration Relation, but faces challenges with galaxy clusters and requires a relativistic extension.
Contribution
This paper reviews the phenomenology of MOND, highlighting its predictions for galactic dynamics and the need for a relativistic theory embedding MOND within a broader framework.
Findings
MOND predicts flat rotation curves from baryonic matter alone.
The Radial Acceleration Relation is naturally explained by MOND.
MOND fails to account fully for galaxy cluster observations.
Abstract
This chapter presents Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND), the proposal that, below a certain acceleration scale , dynamics departs from the Newtonian expectation. In that context, the determining factor for the emergence of apparent missing matter in galactic systems is predicted to be the acceleration, and not the mass or size of the system. MOND enables, for example, the prediction of rotation curves from only the baryonic distribution of galaxies. The simple rule is that the acceleration observed in the low-acceleration regime is the square root of the Newtonian expectation times . Immediately, the flatness of rotation curves follows, as well as the proportionality of the fourth power of the asymptotic circular speed to only the baryonic mass of the galaxy. While the asymptotic circular speed is predicted not to depend on the baryonic surface density of galaxies of fixed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRheology and Fluid Dynamics Studies
