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Evidence of 'Modified Gravity' In 150 Galaxies Strengthens Dark Matter Alternative 98

A team of astronomers has discovered evidence in over 150 galaxies for a long-standing alternative model of "modified gravity." New Atlas reports: [R]esearchers on the new study say they've observed the [external field effect] (EFE) in action in 153 different galaxies. The team was studying the rotation curve of the galaxies, which plots the orbital speed of stars and gas against their distance from the center of the galaxy. The researchers discovered that galaxies in strong external fields slowed down much more frequently than galaxies in weaker external fields did. That's a prediction made only by [Modified Newtonian dynamics] MOND, and the discovery surprised even the astronomers themselves.

"The external field effect on rotation curves is expected to be very tiny," says Federico Lelli, co-author of the study. "We spent months checking various systematics. In the end, it became clear we had a real, solid detection." It's an intriguing result, and it may lend some weight to the MOND hypothesis for further study. But it's important to keep in mind that so far the bulk of the evidence still points towards dark matter, and it'll take much more work to topple that hypothesis entirely.
The research was published in the Astrophysical Journal.
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Evidence of 'Modified Gravity' In 150 Galaxies Strengthens Dark Matter Alternative

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  • So where does gravity come from? Gravity comes from mass. So mass = gravity. The more mass the more gravity. What makes mass? Atoms? Their own mass? or could it be that the electric tension/friction bewteen atoms, or atoms and electrons, "create" mass, thus gravity?
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      No.

      • by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @11:19AM (#60856904) Homepage

        So where does gravity come from?
        Gravity comes from mass. So mass = gravity.

        No.

        "No" is correct.

        So where do babies come from? Babies come from hospitals. So babies=hospitals.

        So where does coffee come from? Coffee comes from Ethiopia. So coffee=Ethiopia

        So where does bread come from? Bread comes from ovens. So bread=ovens.

        The fact that x originates from y does not mean x and y are the same.

        • Equals (=) is wrong. 'Gravity â Mass' is correct. â means âis proportional toâ(TM), and is used to show something that varies in relation to something else. 'Equals' is an oversimplification of what can now be described as a nonlinear proportional relationship, which to Newton appeared linearly proportional at the largest scales he could reasonably assess at the time, being the planetary scale of our solar system. He was limited by the technology of his time, much like Howard Stark.
    • More or less. But not in the sense of some kind of 'friction'. Imagine a ball with a certain energy and its mass equivalent. The gravity or inertia does not car how this energy is made up inside the ball. It does not matter if inside the ball is one heavy brick just sitting there or very light particles moving about very very fast as long as the total energy cones out the same. So if you have an atom and an electron is rotating near the kernel or it is rotating as far away from the kernel as possible witho

    • by Sneftel ( 15416 )

      It's a fun idea. You should do an experiment to see if it's true or not.

    • Im pretty skeptical of modified gravity claims, but my understanding is they propose a different set of equasions governing the mass to gravity relationship, rather than an usneen mass.. The evidence still points very strongly to a dark matter explaination, but we really are in the "We have no frigging idea" stage of the science, so. . .. maybe?

      • by Anonymous Coward
        They still need to explain the observation of the Dark Matter phenomena in galactic voids where there is very little matter. It is great that they noticed some more details about the relationship between Dark Matter and lots of matter, but that does nothing to explain how it works when little matter is present.
        • They still need to explain the observation of the Dark Matter phenomena in galactic voids where there is very little matter.

          Citation needed.

          Remember - even the modified gravity bods (Milgrom and allies) publish through conventional channels, which for this field mostly means the papers are on Arxiv.

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      You're forgetting supergravity, which contends that gravity doesn't come from mass but merely interacts with it.

  • by Forty Two Tenfold ( 1134125 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @06:59AM (#60856256)
    External Field Effect, the Field being Somebody Else's Problem Field.
  • MOND hypothesis? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by xonen ( 774419 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @07:03AM (#60856270) Journal

    MOND hypothesis

    ?

    For what i understood, MOND is 'just' trying to model gravity on galactic scales. It's not a theory about the cause of that, it's just a model, like how we try to model the weather.

    Which makes me think that 'hypothesis' is a totally inappropriate word, since there's no underlying theory. Please correct me if i'm wrong.

    • Re:MOND hypothesis? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Sneftel ( 15416 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @07:27AM (#60856292)

      Well, to some degree it's semantics. The universe works according to a set of axiomatic rules, which are not themselves based on a deeper set of rules; that much is tautological. Our intuition is that those rules should be simple and elegant, for some definitions of "simple" and "elegant". But maybe human intuition isn't perfect, and one of the rules of the universe is "there's a force called gravity, and its strength is complicated and full of particular extra constants, for no deeper reason". What would we do, refuse to accept reality?

      • But maybe human intuition isn't perfect, and one of the rules of the universe is "there's a force called gravity, and its strength is complicated and full of particular extra constants, for no deeper reason". What would we do, refuse to accept reality?

        Who's we... an intelligent person would keep looking.

        • by Sneftel ( 15416 )

          I'm not sure I agree with the breadth of your assertion, but I do agree that intelligent people would keep hoping to find a deeper, more elegant truth. But what if there weren't one? "This cannot be the basic law of the universe, because I don't like it" is not something a rational person should say.

          • Godel broke maths. We thought we could prove all theories starting with a simple and elegant set of axioms. Turns out, however many axioms you have, you always need more.

            Physics started to look clean around 1900. Electrons, Protons (and Nuclear Electrons). But then it all went downhill. Today we have an ever growing zoo of particles. Time and space are all twisted up. And the more we look the stranger it gets.

            God played a joke on us. There is no underlying single formula that describes the universe.

      • DOGDIDIT (Score:5, Funny)

        by fyngyrz ( 762201 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @10:30AM (#60856702) Homepage Journal

        What would we do, refuse to accept reality?

        [briefly considers the 17 churches in this small town of ~3300] ...that seems to be a not unusual course of action.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

          If God had a choice, why would she make the gravity rules all goofy? I suppose she got tired of refactoring her little "ant farm" to have clean rules, and just patched it with layers of tweaks. After all, it's only a hobby. (It's all screwed up anyhow, so throw in an obnoxious orange ant for the fun of it.)

          • Because she already had a mostly working implementation and found that a simpler gravity would require a major refactor of the rest of creation, so she put a bunch of arcane cosmology into the gravity function, added a TODO, and flicked the switch, deeming the solution good enough for v1.

      • Our intuition is that those rules should be simple and elegant, for some definitions of "simple" and "elegant". But maybe human intuition isn't perfect, and one of the rules of the universe is "there's a force called gravity, and its strength is complicated and full of particular extra constants, for no deeper reason". What would we do, refuse to accept reality?

        Maybe everything is the way it is because an invisible creature from the 6th dimension likes it that way and there is no deeper reason.

    • Re:MOND hypothesis? (Score:5, Informative)

      by ConfusedVorlon ( 657247 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @07:47AM (#60856326) Homepage

      Nope - it slightly changes the equations on how gravity works.

      from wikipedia:

      Milgrom noted that this discrepancy could be resolved if the gravitational force experienced by a star in the outer regions of a galaxy was proportional to the square of its centripetal acceleration (as opposed to the centripetal acceleration itself, as in Newton's second law), or alternatively if gravitational force came to vary inversely with radius (as opposed to the inverse square of the radius, as in Newton's law of gravity)

    • It's not that it doesn't teach you anything, but it's similar to curve fitting.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        ALL scientific theories are similar to curve fitting. First you fit the curve, and then you check in other areas to see if it fits there, too. If it does you think you have a useful theory. The curve fitting part is the "hypothesis". Once you check it against other areas, and it matches, it becomes a theory.

        This "external field effect" is part of "checking against other areas". IIUC, the version being tested has been modified from the original MOND to be consistent with General Relativity....but it sti

        • Curve fitting means you add parameters until you find a way you can use empirical data to decide on the values of the parameters.
          guessing the nature of the curve family is a hypothesis . Requireing few parameters is a measure of the quality of the hypothesis. Von Neumann's quote goes "give me 4 parameters and i can fit an elephant". It is mentioned.
          multivariant analysis is the opposite of a hypothesis.

          • by dasunt ( 249686 )

            Von Neumann's quote goes "give me 4 parameters and i can fit an elephant".

            What is interesting that since MOND has been proposed, it also fits information that we didn't have at the time.

            Which, despite its flaws, makes me think there may be something there.

            So to use the example of Von Neumann, it's like taking four parameters, fitting an elephant, then finding that the same equation works for almost every other animal.

    • #BlackMatterLives ?

    • The MOND hypothesis is that gravity does not follow a simple inverse square relationship, like Newtonian dynamics (and our observations to date) says it does. From this hypothesis, you can then build a model that you hope explains galactic and cosmological dynamics without requiring the presence of dark matter. Spoile alert: it doesn't work very well.

  • MOND vs. dark matter (Score:4, Informative)

    by chx496 ( 6973044 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @08:10AM (#60856370)

    Disclaimer up front: I'm no astrophysicist.

    From what I've read and watched about MOND is that there appears to be evidence against it -- mainly because of two observations:

    1. While observations of the rotation speed of individual galaxies can be used to fit a parameter in a modified equation of motion for large-scale objects, the fit parameter differs widely from galaxy to galaxy and thus does not appear to be universal.

    2. There are some observations where MOND completely breaks down, most notably the Bullet Cluster [wikipedia.org].

    I've skimmed the paper, and what the authors claim is that existing dark matter models don't align with the observations they analyze in their paper (though they only mention CDM in their model, and while that's the most prominent candidate dark matter model a the moment, it's not the only one). From my very short skim of the paper it appears that their methodology is sound at least on a surface-level inspection -- but let's say their analysis holds even under a lot of scrutiny: to me this paper is not actual evidence in favor of MOND, it's rather evidence against existing dark matter models (though not necessarily dark matter itself), because they don't account for the observation made here. The paper does poke a hole in these dark matter models, and it's going to be very interesting how or whether scientists will be able to find better dark matter models because of this, or whether they'll come up with something completely different. But as long as the problems MOND has with various other cosmic observations (see above) aren't accounted for, I just can't see MOND as a viable hypothesis.

    (As a side note: I think the paper is overstating the claim that they've found evidence of the strong equivalence principle (SEP) being violated: what they've actually found is that the SEP appears to be violated under the assumption that dark matter is distributed according to predictions by existing dark matter models, but that doesn't mean that the dark matter distribution couldn't be different to result in those curves, and we simply don't have the right predictive model for its distribution. Not saying that's definitely the case, I have no idea, but I'm always careful with claims that something so fundamental as the SEP is violated -- you need a lot more evidence for that.)

    A good introduction to the astronomical evidence for dark matter can be found in this video by an astrophysicist [youtube.com].

    • by Joe2020 ( 6760092 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @01:15PM (#60857372)

      Do note that Dark Matter allows astronomers to place an arbitrary amount of it at an arbitrary location in space in order to explain a phenomenon. It gives them 4 variables to freely chose from to eliminate discrepancies in the current models, and astronomers have gone as far as using variable distributions of Dark Matter in space, thus basically stretching it to a near infinite amount of freedom. It makes Dark Matter not only a well working theory, but it carries a great burden of proof on its shoulder. It has so far not been detected and all so called proofs of its existence are self-fulfilling at this point.

      MOND and other alternative models choose smaller degrees of freedom to explain the observable universe, and so these fail intentionally more easily, to allow for corrections sooner. With Dark Matter hinges everything on the detection of a particle, and with every failed Dark Matter experiment is it getting more difficult and costly to prove its existence.

      In short, comparing MOND to Dark Matter is not as simple as comparing apples to apples.

    • by jdagius ( 589920 )

      "There are some observations where MOND completely breaks down, most notably the Bullet Cluster."

      MOND does not "completely break down" here, because there are plausible explanations for the lensing which do not require DM, according to Moti Milgrom, who created the MOND theory in 1982.
      http://astroweb.case.edu/ssm/m... [case.edu]

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      The problem is that, whilst all your objections are true, the same objections hold for dark matter. There's no model that works in all situations, which is a serious problem.

      • There's no model that works in all situations, which is a serious problem.

        Is it? All that says to me is that it means that human ingenuity and inventiveness is less than what is necessary to accurately describe the universe. Outside the arts and fiction writers, I've never heard anyone seriously propose that human ingenuity and inventiveness is actually infinite - which would put it in a class of two with human stupidity (cited in evidence : Slashdot comments, which puts a high minimum bound on the quantity

  • What they call dark matter is actually just apples. The only reason astronomers haven't realized it yet is that there aren't any observatories near orchards.
  • by Joe2020 ( 6760092 ) on Tuesday December 22, 2020 @08:57AM (#60856478)

    MOND has always hypothesised that Newton's Laws could need adjusting on the galactic scale. When the math behind MOND shows to hold true beyond the galactic scale and leads to new findings consistent with new observations, then it's already paying off.

  • I thought dark matter was needed to explain the measured cosmological expansion. Is that consistent with this MOND model?
    • 2 different phenomenon are associated with 'Dark' in astronomy but are unrelated.

      * Dark Matter is a model of a source of mass that has no electromagnetic interaction and is distributed between stars and galaxies. At a scale of about 10k ly it becomes easily detectable with gravitational lensing in areas that are unexpected from the visible matter and the orbital velocities of stars in galaxies.

      * Dark Energy is a model that shows a very weak apparent acceleration of space itself with no input of known energy

      • Doesn't the standard model of cosmology include the total matter? There are limits on baryonic matter so I thought to match the expansion curve you needed dark matter. Dark energy is only important in the recent universe when the density of normal+dark matter became low enough to see the dark energy expansion (not counting inflation of course)
  • It's an argument over where to stick the extra layers of epicycles to make the numbers match. With all this fudging, I strongly suspect we are just not spotting a simpler explanation. This includes throwing dimensions at string theory.

    Then again, maybe the Universe(s) is indeed some kind of giant regression engine, where natural selection and/or the anthropic principle reshuffles each universe instance and "tunes" each layer, like some kind of parametric DNA.

  • Rigged! (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 )

    "Gravity is rigged, believe me! It's was tweaked in a Wuhan lab to make Americans fall harder to give Jiihna a factory worker advantage. I'm the one chosen to fix it, but am being blocked by rigged voting machines and fake news, who won't let my family hunt lions, tigers, and bears. Dem Dorothy is NOT going to stop me this time; Chloroquine made me water-proof. I'm going to declare Martian Law and confiscate all the Diebold machines to get to the bottom of this terrible terrible scam, AND find Hillary's ema

    • Take my vote! Please!

      (And I say that in full awareness of the way that dictators normally get into power by being elected.)

  • If mass and energy are interchangeable, i.e. E=Mc2, then it follows that both mass AND energy can cause gravity.

    Seems like there's an awful lot of (gravity - via energy), in galaxies.
  • They didn't post this on Arxiv. [SHRUG] Slightly unusual, but not particularly important.

    I was going through my daily listing of new Arxiv papers a couple of hours ago, and briefly (about 3 seconds) considered reading the latest missive from Milgrom trying to get MOND to work. It didn't interest me then, and it still doesn't, and the coincidence is hardly significant (Milgrom publishes several times a year, and the last time I did the numbers, on average there is a paper on MOND published about every fortn

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