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The radial acceleration relation (RAR) locally relates the `observed acceleration inferred from the dynamics of a system to the acceleration implied by its baryonic matter distribution. The relation as traced by galaxy rotation curves is one-to-one with remarkably little scatter, implying that the dynamics of a system can be predicted simply by measuring its density profile as traced by e.g. stellar light or gas emission lines. Extending the relation to accelerations below those usually probed by practically observable kinematic tracers is challenging, especially once accounting for faintly emitting baryons, such as the putative warm-hot intergalactic medium, becomes important. We show that in the low-acceleration regime, the (inverted) RAR predicts an unphysical, declining enclosed baryonic mass profile for systems with `observed acceleration profiles steeper than $g_{rm obs}propto r^{-1}$ (corresponding to density profiles steeper than isothermal - $rho(r)propto r^{-2}$). If the RAR is tantamount to a natural law, such acceleration profiles cannot exist. We apply this argument to test the compatibility of an extrapolation of the rotation curve-derived RAR to low accelerations with data from galaxy-galaxy weak lensing, dwarf spheroidal galaxy stellar kinematic, and outer Milky~Way dynamical measurements, fully independent of the uncertainties inherent in direct measurements of the baryonic matter distribution. In all cases we find that the data weakly favour a break to a steeper low-acceleration slope. Improvements in measurements and modelling of the outer Milky~Way, and weak lensing, seem like the most promising path toward stronger constraints on the low-acceleration behaviour of the RAR.
Galaxies covering several orders of magnitude in stellar mass and a variety of Hubble types have been shown to follow the Radial Acceleration Relation (RAR), a relationship between $g_{rm obs}$, the observed circular acceleration of the galaxy, and $
Galaxies follow a tight radial acceleration relation (RAR): the acceleration observed at every radius correlates with that expected from the distribution of baryons. We use the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method to fit the mean RAR to 175 individual gal
Verlinde (2016) has recently proposed that spacetime and gravity may emerge from an underlying microscopic theory. In a de Sitter spacetime, such emergent gravity (EG) contains an additional gravitational force due to dark energy, which may explain t
We study the radial acceleration relation (RAR) between the total ($a_{rm tot}$) and baryonic ($a_{rm bary}$) centripetal acceleration profiles of central galaxies in the cold dark matter (CDM) paradigm. We analytically show that the RAR is intimatel
McGaugh et al. (2016) have found, in a large sample of disc systems, a tight nonlinear relationship between the total radial accelerations $g$ and their components $g_b$ arisen from the distribution of the baryonic matter [McGaugh_2016]. Here, we inv