From Modified Newtonian Dynamics to Superfluid Vacuum Theory
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Obtain the correlation between mass and rotational velocity giving rise to the observed flat curves on the outskirts of galaxies;
- Avoid galaxy cusps;
- Reduce the number of dwarf galaxies;
- Help model the planar arrangement of satellite galaxies.
2. MOND Preliminaries
2.1. Significance of the MOND Acceleration Constant
“ can be determined from several of the MOND laws in which it appears, as well as from more detailed analyses, such as of full rotation curves of galaxies. All of these give consistently cm . It was noticed early on [6,7,8] that this value is of the order of cosmologically relevant accelerations:where is the Hubble constant, and the cosmological constant. In other words, the MOND length, cm Mpc, is of order of today’s Hubble distance, namely, , or of the de Sitter radius associated with , namely, . The MOND mass, gr, is then , of the order of the closure mass within today’s horizon, or the total energy within the Universe observable today.”
“For example, by the heuristic idea put forth in [9], it is the quantum vacuum–which is shaped by the state of the Universe–that is the inertia-giving agent. The origin of in cosmology also emerges, and is indeed . The vacuum then serves as an absolute inertial frame (acceleration with respect to the vacuum is detectable, e.g., through the Unruh effect). Here, it is cosmology that enters local dynamics to give rise to the MOND-cosmology coincidence. The “interpolating function” is not put in by hand, but emerges. It could be calculated only for the very special (and impractical) case of eternally constant, linear acceleration, a. If we generalize Newton’s second law to , then one finds . At high accelerations, , it gives the Newtonian expression, , while at low accelerations, , we have . This is exactly the required MOND behavior; furthermore, the observed relation is gotten. The “interpolating function” underlying this result is analogous to the “interpolating function” that enters the relation between the kinetic energy, , and the momentum P and M should be in italic, P, of a particle of mass M, in special relativity: , which in the limit gives , and at low momenta, , gives .”
2.2. Simple Non-Relativistic MOND Theory
3. Lagrangian Approach
Bekenstein Formulation(s)
4. Superfluid Lagrangian Formulation
in her work on “emergent gravity” [19]. However, this same reference also returns to Bekenstein’s RAQUAL. To mediate a force between baryons, DM phonons must couple to the baryon density as:“It is the combination of the power in the kinetic term (11) combined with the peculiar coupling (12) that gives rise to the MOND-like behavior. The same features can be found in the vector-based model considered …”
One is reminded by the statement attributed to J. Von Neumann revealed in a meeting between Freeman Dyson and Enrico Fermi: “With 4 parameters, I can fit an elephant. With 5, I can make it wiggle its trunk” [22]. This brings us to the finite-T Lagrangian:“A fourth parameter of the particles themselves is their self-interaction cross-section setting the conditions for their thermalization, while a fifth parameter will later be introduced to accommodate for finite-temperature effects” [21].
“Our conclusion is that all MOND-like models proposed in the literature, including the new ones examined in this paper, present serious difficulties: Not only they are unnaturally fine tuned, but they also fail to reproduce some experimental facts or are unstable or inconsistent as field theories. However, some frameworks, notably the tensor-vector-scalar (TeVeS) one of Bekenstein and Sanders, seem more promising than others, and our discussion underlines in which directions one should try to improve them.”
Relativistic Completion
“The biggest problem is that it’s not very well understood under exactly which conditions DM forms a Superfluid. There are also different kinds of particles that can form a Superfluid and it’s not clear which of those fits the data best. Another problem is that it’s really not well understood how a fluid condenses to a Superfluid in a curved space-time. That’s because the people who normally study Superfluids don’t have to think about gravity all that much. If they take it into account at all, it’s a vertical gradient in the laboratory…I think it’s a mistake to regard DM and MOND as two competing theories, each of which has to be made to fit all of the data. To me the data say the answer is a combination of both.”
5. Alternative—LogSE Formulations
- Dilute (Gross–Pitaevskii-type) Bose–Einstein condensate;
- Ginzburg–Sobyanin-type fluid;
- Logarithmic Superfluid.
- Have a connection to a relativistic gravity theory;
- Have a proven capacity for modeling BECs and cold atoms;
- Involve a much simpler Lagrangian formulation than those of the previous Superfluid models;
- Recover the advantages of MOND for modeling galactic rotation curves.
Addressing the Objections to Nonlinear Quantum Formulation
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
MOND | Modified Newtonian Dynamics |
BIMOND | Bimetric MOND |
QUMOND | Quasilinear MOND |
FUNDAMOND | (Unique Relativistic) Fundamental MOND (Theory) |
BEC | Bose–Einstein Condensate |
GRT | General Relativity |
FRW | Friedmann–Robertson–Walker (GRT Solution and Model) |
SVT | Superfluid Vacuum Theory |
DM | Dark Matter |
CDM | Cold Dark Matter |
CDM | Cold Dark Matter Model |
DE | Dark Energy |
BTFR | Baryonic Tully–Fisher relation |
AQUAL | A QUAdratic Lagrangian |
RAQUAL | Relativistic AQUAL |
TeVeS | Tensor–Vector–Scalar (Theory) |
ADM | Arnowitt–Deser–Misner (GRT Method) |
UFG | Unitary Fermi Gas |
LogSE | Logarithmic Schrödinger Equation |
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Scott, T.C. From Modified Newtonian Dynamics to Superfluid Vacuum Theory. Entropy 2023, 25, 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/e25010012
Scott TC. From Modified Newtonian Dynamics to Superfluid Vacuum Theory. Entropy. 2023; 25(1):12. https://doi.org/10.3390/e25010012
Chicago/Turabian StyleScott, Tony C. 2023. "From Modified Newtonian Dynamics to Superfluid Vacuum Theory" Entropy 25, no. 1: 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/e25010012
APA StyleScott, T. C. (2023). From Modified Newtonian Dynamics to Superfluid Vacuum Theory. Entropy, 25(1), 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/e25010012