-
Kiselev [8] obtained the black hole solution of perfect fluid matter in GR. They assumed that the equation of state defined by the ratio of pressure to the density of perfect fluid matter
$ \omega = p/\rho $ is a constant, where$ p $ and$ \rho $ are the pressure and density of perfect fluid matter, respectively. The expression of the black hole solution is$ {\rm d}s^{2} = -f(r){\rm d}t^{2}+\dfrac{1}{g(r)}{\rm d}r^{2}+r^{2}{\rm d}\Omega^{2}, $
(1) where
$ f(r) $ and$ g(r) $ are written as$ f(r) = g(r) = 1-\dfrac{2M}{r}-\dfrac{\alpha}{r^{1+3\omega}}.$
(2) $ M $ represents the mass of a black hole, and$ \alpha $ is the intensity parameter of perfect fluid matter around a black hole. If the equation of state is given by$ \omega = -1/3 $ , the black hole solution represents a Schwarzschild black hole with a perfect fluid dark matter background [9-12]. In general, perfect fluid dark matter (PFDM) is quintessence matter, because only for this type of matter, the equation of state is possibly equal to -1/3. At the same time, the solution can also be understood as a black hole solution under the PFDM model. In this situation, the flatness of the rotation curves of spiral galaxies at a long distance can be explained naturally. Here, we assume that this property continues to be valid in Rastall gravity. -
Heydarzade & Darabi [13] generalized Kiselev's [8] solution from GR to Rastall gravity and obtained a spherically symmetric black hole solution in perfect fluid matter. This solution has the form of
$ f(r) = g(r) = 1-\dfrac{2M}{r}-\alpha r^{\textstyle-\frac{1+3\omega-6\beta(1+\omega)}{1-3\beta(1+\omega)}}, $
(3) where
$ \kappa\lambda $ is a parameter of the Rastall gravity, which determines the distribution of perfect fluid matter. For convenience, we write$ \kappa\lambda $ as$ \beta $ throughout this article, i.e.$ \beta = \kappa\lambda $ . For PFDM ($ \omega = -1/3 $ ), the energy density$ \rho_{DM} $ can be derived from the Einstein equation. Because the motion velocity of a dark matter particle is much smaller than the speed of light, the energy density of PFDM can approximate the mass density. Here, from Kamada et al. [14], the baryon matter can be treated as an index disk, i.e.$\rho_{b} = \Sigma_{0}\exp[-r/r_{d}]\delta(z)$ , where$ \Sigma_{0} $ and$ r_{d} $ are the central surface density and scale radius of the disk, respectively. In this space-time metric, using the mass density of the PFDM halo and baryon disk, we can calculate the total mass function, described as$M(r) = 4\pi\int_{0}^{r}\rho_{DM}r^{2}{\rm d}r+ 2\pi\int_{0}^{r}\rho_{b}r{\rm d}r$ . We then obtain the rotation velocity of stars on the equatorial plane, written as [15]$ \upsilon(r) = \sqrt{\dfrac{GM(r)}{r}} = \sqrt{\dfrac{G\alpha}{2}\dfrac{1-4\beta}{1-2\beta}r^{\textstyle\frac{4\beta}{1-2\beta}}-2\pi G\Sigma_{0}r_{d}\exp\left[\dfrac{-r}{r_{d}}\right]\left(1+\dfrac{r_{d}}{r}\right)} . $
(4) Where G is the gravitational constant. Here, we have neglected the contributions of the gas and bulge, because the potentials of gas and bulge are very small compared with those of DM halo and baryonic matter. This is a good approximation for fitting the rotation curves of LSB galaxies (similar reason can be found in [14] on the third page). We will use this equation to fit the rotation curves of LSB galaxies, and determine the
$ \beta $ values of the Rastall gravity. The parameter$ r_{d} $ is$ 2 kpc $ [14] in Section 3. -
In the theory of gravity, it is extremely difficult to solve the equation of a gravitational field. Through the Einstein field equation, we know that the distribution of the energy-momentum tensor determines the structure of space-time. Due to the complexity of the matter distribution, the energy-momentum tensor cannot be expressed in a specific form. Therefore, certain conditions, i.e. that the energy density is greater than or equal to zero, were used to study the gravitational field equation.
In 1955, Raychaudhuri formally proposed the basic equation of the energy conditions, such as the weak energy condition and strong energy condition. Under these energy conditions, the fundamental properties of gravity are satisfied. In references [13] and [15], they presented a specific study on the energy conditions of Rastall gravity, and found that the constraint of the weak energy condition and strong energy condition on the Rastall parameter
$ \beta $ are equal under the assumption of a perfect fluid. They can be given by$ (3\beta(1+\omega)-3\omega)(1-4\beta)\geqslant 0. $
(5) If
$ \omega = -1/3 $ , the perfect fluid matter is described by the PFDM model, and the range of the Rastall parameter$ \beta $ is$ -1/2<\beta<1/4 $ . If the$ \beta $ obtained by fitting the observation data is within this range and is a constant on the scale of a spiral galaxy, elliptical galaxy and cosmology, Rastall gravity is supported. If the opposite is true, the model will be excluded. -
In this section, we choose LSB galaxies dominated by dark matter to limit the Rastall parameter. Now, according to Eq. (4), we adopt the Bayesian method [16] to fit the rotation curves of 16 LSB spiral galaxies, and obtain good fits overall, with
$ \chi^{2}/dof<1 $ for 15 galaxies (F563-1, F568-3, F583-1, F571-8, F579-v1, F583-4, F730-v1, U5750, U11454, U11616, U11648, U11819, ESO0140040, ESO2060140, ESO3020120), and$ \chi^{2}/dof<2 $ for one galaxy (ESO4250180). Here, the predicted velocity$\upsilon_{\rm pre}$ is taken from Eq. (4) as$ \upsilon(r) $ , and the observed velocity$\upsilon_{\rm obs}$ is taken from an astronomical website (http://astroweb.case.edu/ssm/data/RCsmooth.0701.dat). For each galaxy, we assume that it has$ i $ data points. Therefore, the likelihood function can be expressed as$ \ln{\cal{L}}= -\dfrac{1}{2}\sum\limits_{i = 0}^{16}\left[\dfrac{(\upsilon_{\rm pre}^{i}-\upsilon_{\rm obs}^{i})^{2}}{s_{i}^{2}}+\ln(2\pi s_{i}^{2})\right], $
(6) where
$ s_{i}^{2} = \delta^{2}+(\upsilon_{\rm err}^{i})^{2}, $
(7) and
$ \delta $ is the intrinsic scatter between$\upsilon_{\rm pre}$ and$\upsilon_{\rm obs}$ , which is considered to be a free parameter in our Bayesian analysis (see [16] for a detailed explanation). As it is not a model parameter, it is unrelated to Eq. (4).$\upsilon_{\rm err}$ is the measurement error of$\upsilon_{\rm obs}$ . Now, the posterior probability function can be written as$ p(\alpha, \beta, \Sigma_{0}, \delta|{\upsilon_{\rm obs}}) = {\cal{L}}({\upsilon_{\rm obs}|\alpha, \beta, \Sigma_{0}, \delta})p(\alpha, \beta, \Sigma_{0}, \delta). $
(8) Here, for each LSB galaxy, we choose a flat prior
$ p(\alpha, \beta, \Sigma_{0}, \delta) $ and use a Python implementation named Emcee [17] along with four free parameters$ \alpha, \beta, \Sigma_{0}, \delta $ to fit the rotation curves. Our results are shown in Table 1.Galaxy (1) $ \beta $ (2)$ \chi^{2}/dof $ (3)F563-1 0.053 0.877 F568-3 0.155 0.857 F583-1 0.15 0.893 F571-8 0.143 0.877 F579-v1 0.047 0.125 F583-4 0.141 0.216 F730-v1 0.096 0.53 U5750 0.148 0.821 U11454 0.118 0.823 U11616 0.122 0.778 U11648 0.132 0.361 U11819 0.147 0.951 ESO0140040 0.084 0.778 ESO2060140 0.1 0.813 ESO3020120 0.136 0.405 ESO4250180 0.124 1.756 Table 1. Best fitting results of the rotation curves for 16 LSB spiral galaxies using Eq. (4). The corresponding rotation curves and the joint constraint plots of the parameters are presented in Figs. 1, 2, 3, 4 in the appendix. Columns (1), (2) and (3) are the name of the galaxy, the fitting values of Rastall parameter
$ \beta $ and the$ \chi^{2} $ values, respectively.
Observational constraints on Rastall gravity from rotation curves of low surface brightness galaxies
- Received Date: 2020-02-25
- Accepted Date: 2020-04-16
- Available Online: 2020-08-01
Abstract: Rastall gravity is a modification of Einstein's general relativity in which the energy-momentum conservation is not satisfied and depends on the gradient of the Ricci curvature. It is currently in dispute whether Rastall gravity is equivalent to general relativity (GR). In this work, we constrain the theory using the rotation curves of low surface brightness (LSB) spiral galaxies. By fitting the rotation curves of LSB galaxies, we obtain parameter