2. Theoretical Origin of Dark Electromagnetism
A theory of unification of the fundamental forces has recently been proposed [
2], starting from the foundational requirement that there should exist a reformulation of quantum field theory that does not depend on classical time [
3]. This theory is based on an
symmetry group, in which each of the two
groups is assumed to branch as follows as a result of spontaneous symmetry breaking, which is identified with the electroweak symmetry breaking:
Leaving the two
s aside for a moment, the
pair arising from the
branching is mapped to an (8 + 8 = 16)-dimensional split bioctonionic space from which our 4D spacetime, as well as the internal symmetry space for the standard model forces (and two newly predicted forces), is assumed to emerge.
The three arising from the branching of each of the two s, with the rightmost in each set branching as , are interpreted as follows. In the first , the first is and describes three generations of left-handed standard model fermions (eight per generation, along with their anti-particles). The second is associated with the of QCD. The branched third describes the electroweak symmetry of the standard model, broken into .
In the second of the two
s, the first
is
and describes three generations of standard model right-handed fermions, including three types of sterile neutrinos (eight fermions per generation, along with their anti-particles). The second
is identified with a newly predicted but yet-to-be-discovered new (likely short-range) ‘sixth force’ named
. The third
describes what we call the dark electro-grav sector, which breaks into the newly predicted ‘fifth force’
, which we name dark electromagnetism. We propose this to be the relativistic MOND theory (a gauge theory), whose non-relativistic limit is Milgrom’s MOND [
4]. The broken
symmetry is proposed to give rise to classical gravitation described by the general theory of relativity (GR). At low accelerations, the fifth force of dark electromagnetism (DEM) dominates over GR, whereas at high accelerations, GR dominates over DEM, with the transition coming at the critical MOND acceleration
, where
is the cosmological acceleration of the current accelerating Universe. We reiterate that standard general relativity is assumed to emerge from the broken
symmetry, whereas
is a newly predicted unbroken symmetry (likely short-range and extremely weak, and in which the charged leptons and down family of quarks take part).
The particle content of this unification proposal has been described in detail by Kaushik et al. [
2]. All the 248 + 248 = 496 degrees of freedom of
are accounted for. The only fermions in the theory are three generations of standard model chiral fermions. Apart from the 12 standard model gauge bosons, there are 12 newly predicted spin-one gauge bosons associated with the
sector. Eight of these are so-called gravi-gluons associated with the (likely to be short-range and ultra-weak compared to QCD)
. The gauge boson associated with
is named the dark photon. It is massless and has zero electric charge. Of the three bosons associated with the broken
symmetry, two have zero electric charges but are as massive as the Planck mass, and hence mediate interactions at the Planck length range: these are analogues of the
and
bosons of the weak force. The third is massless and has an insignificantly tiny electric charge (scaled down enormously due to cosmological inflation in comparison to the charge of the electron), which can be set to zero for all practical purposes. This boson is the analogue of the
of the weak force. The pre-gravitation
symmetry is mediated by spin-one gauge bosons, with gravitation, as described by the metric tensor in the general theory of relativity, emerging only in the classical limit. In our approach, classical GR is not to be quantised, which is why we do not have a fundamental, non-composite, spin-2 graviton in the theory. This does not contradict the fact that classical GR admits the experimentally confirmed quadrupolar gravitational waves. The apparent spin-2 nature of gravitation is emergent only in the classical limit. The underlying theory from which spacetime and GR emerge in the classical limit is a pre-quantum, pre-spacetime theory. Gravitation and quantum theory are emergent phenomena.
There are two Higgs doublets in this theory. The first is a standard model Higgs, which gives mass to left-chiral fermions upon spontaneous breaking of the electroweak symmetry. The second is a newly predicted Higgs boson, which gives electric charge to the right-chiral fermions upon breaking of the dark electro-grav symmetry and coincides with the electroweak symmetry breaking. Unlike in the standard model, both Higgs are now predicted to be composite, being composed of the very fermions to which they give mass and electric charge. Of the 496 degrees of freedom in the theory, 32 are with the bosons (after including 4 each for the two Higgs). Moreover, 32 degrees of freedom are with the internal generation space and pre-spacetime (16 each), and 144 d.o.f. are with the fermions. The remaining 288 d.o.f. go into making two composite Higgs, 144 per Higgs. It is noteworthy that each Higgs has as many composite d.o.f. as the total number of d.o.f. in the fermions. The bosonic content of the theory can also be confirmed by examining the Lagrangian of the theory, as done by Raj and Singh [
5].
The source charge associated with
is, of course, the electric charge, and in the algebraic approach to unification, it can be shown to be quantised, as done, for instance, by Furey [
6]. The electric charge is defined as the number operator constructed from generators of the Clifford algebra
, which, in turn, is generated by octonionic chains acting on octonions. It has been shown that the electric charge can only take the values
. Furthermore, the spinorial states associated with these charge values exhibit the following symmetry under the group
(which is a maximal subgroup of the smallest exceptional group
, the automorphism group of the octonions). States with charges 0 and 1 are singlets of
, states with charge 1/3 are anti-triplets, and states with charge 2/3 are triplets. This enables the interpretation that states with charges (0, 1/3, 2/3, 1) are, respectively, the (left-handed) neutrino, anti-down-quark, up-quark, and positron. The
SU(3) is hence identified with the
of QCD. Anti-particle states are obtained by complex conjugation of particle states and are shown to have opposite signs of electric charge, as anticipated. Note that these fermions are left-chiral particles, and their corresponding anti-particles are right-chiral. Furthermore, this quantisation of electric charge holds for every one of the three fermion generations. The Clifford algebra construction applies equally well to the second and third generations.
Next, consider the symmetry
associated with the right-handed sector, with these two being the two new forces [
2]. Now, the source charge associated with the
symmetry is the square root of mass
, not the electric charge. The motivation for proposing this interpretation (for the number operator made from the Clifford algebra
Cl(6) generators that define the right-chiral fermions) comes from the following remarkable fact [
7]. The ratio of the square roots of the masses of the electron, up-quark, and down-quark is 1:2:3, which is the opposite of the ratios of their electric charges ratio at 3:2:1. We treat the electric charge and the square root of mass on the same footing. The square root of mass also takes two signs:
and
. The positive sign is for matter, and the negative sign is for anti-matter: like signs attract under dark electromagnetic force and unlike signs repel. Note that mass
m, being the square of
, is necessarily positive. Three new colours for
are introduced: the right-handed neutrino and the down-quark are singlets of these new colours and have
values of 0 and 1, respectively. The electron is an anti-triplet of
with an
value of 1/3, and the up-quark is a triplet of
with an
value of 2/3. Their anti-particles have corresponding square-root mass values
. This mass quantisation is derived from first principles, just as for the electric charge quantisation, and holds for each of the three generations, just like for the electric charge. Note that our proposal also gives a dynamical definition for matter/anti-matter: matter has a positive sign of the square root of mass (
), whereas anti-matter has a negative sign of the square root of mass (
). Mass
m is, of course, positive for both matter and anti-matter and is obtained from squaring
.
Why, then, do the second and third fermion generations have such peculiar mass ratios, as observed in experiments [
8]? The answer is that even when we conduct experiments to measure particle masses, the measurements are electromagnetic in nature and based on electric charge eigenstates. However, these electric charge eigenstates do not correspond to the (square-root) mass eigenstates. The exceptional Jordan algebra associated with the three fermion generations (one algebra for electric charge eigenstates that are left-chiral, and one algebra for the square-root mass eigenstates that are right-chiral) can be used to express the electric charge eigenstates as superpositions of the square-root mass eigenstates using the so-called Jordan eigenvalues. The weights of these superpositions reveal the observed mass ratios with very good accuracy [
9], strongly supporting the proposal that the source charge associated with the dark electromagnetic force is the square root of mass. The fact that the source charge for the MOND acceleration is also the square root of mass encourages us to identify dark electromagnetism with relativistic MOND.
In the very early Universe, at the epoch of electroweak symmetry breaking, the enormous repulsive dark electromagnetic force segregated matter (
) from anti-matter (
so that our part of the matter–anti-matter symmetric Universe is matter-dominated [
5]. This scenario bears resemblance to the CPT symmetric universe model proposed by Boyle and Turok [
10,
11,
12]. As a result, the dark electromagnetic force in our matter-dominated Universe is apparently attractive only, even though
is a vector interaction). Similarly, the emergent gravitational interaction, which is the classical limit of the
gauge theory, is attractive only. We predict that the
force between an electron and a positron is repulsive.
Another important aspect of the octonionic theory [
3] (i.e., the one based on
symmetry) is the ‘square root of spacetime’. The spinorial states, which define the fermions and satisfy the Dirac equation, are constructed from the algebra of the octonions acting on themselves. In this sense, a spinor is the square of an octonion, and since spinors are defined on spacetime, this suggests the view that a space that is labelled using octonions as coordinates is actually the square root of spacetime. However, the absolute square modulus of an octonion should be assigned dimensions of length-squared, not length (as the Lagrangian of the octonionic theory suggests). This compels us to introduce the effective distance
in the unbroken theory, where
is the de Sitter horizon. An unbroken symmetry such as
thus ought to have a distance dependence (say in Coulomb’s law) as
, and not
. This is a possible explanation for the
dependence of the MOND acceleration, which, taken together with the source charge for
, can explain why the MOND acceleration behaves as
, unlike gravitation, which goes as
in the Newtonian limit. We can say that gravitation is the square of dark electromagnetism: the source current for DEM is
, whereas the source current for gravitation is
, which is nothing but the energy-momentum tensor.
In our proposal for DEM as relativistic MOND, the DEM force mimics Maxwell’s electrodynamics, with the electric charge replaced with the square root of mass, and the spatial distance replaced with an effective distance , where is the Hubble radius, or equivalently, the de Sitter horizon. The source term, in the non-relativistic limit, is the effective volume density of square-root mass: . The left-hand side of the Poisson equation is the Laplacian made using the effective distance function. Such a Poisson equation yields MOND in the deep MOND regime.
Since MOND has a distance dependence in the acceleration as
, the associated MOND potential is logarithmic. This is, in principle, consistent with the source being a surface square-root mass density
, as if the MOND dynamics were taking place effectively in two spatial dimensions. This is consistent with the logarithmic form for the Green function of the Laplace equation in 2D, as we review in
Appendix A. However, it should be noted that this surface density of square-root mass does not have a well-defined limit as
(it diverges as
), whereas the volume density of square-root mass, defined using the effective distance, does have a well-defined limit that is finite. Also, we would like to maintain the structure of the left-hand side of the Poisson equation, and this is consistent with proposing MOND as the non-relativistic limit of the
gauge theory.
Why do we associate the
gauge symmetry with gravitation, as in the general theory of relativity? The following arguments provide a number of independent hints in favour of the notion that the group
(arising in the octonionic theory [
2,
3,
5]) qualifies to describe a theory of gravity in four dimensions.
In the octonionic theory, the product group emerges, with one copy being left-handed and the other being right-handed. Now, is locally isomorphic to , the rotation group in four Euclidean dimensions. A Wick rotation will transform into the Lorentz group . So, the Lorentz group in four dimensions is locally isomorphic to the product group .
That the left-handed subgroup accounts for the weak interaction within the standard model has been known for a long time. Here, we claim that the right-handed subgroup can account for gravity in four dimensions.
To see how a graviton could possibly emerge in this setting, consider the tensor product of two copies of the three-dimensional irreducible representations of . Now, . The representation carries spin 2 and can thus accommodate the graviton. We expect the representation to accommodate the emergent spin-2 graviton, with the representation being the gravitational analogue of the electroweak and . The 0 representation might correspond to the standard model Higgs.
Moreover, Fermi’s phenomenological theory of weak interactions has a Lagrangian that carries the Fermi constant multiplying the product of two currents; the dimension of is [energy]−2. On the other hand, general relativity has a Lagrangian that carries Newton’s constant , where the coupling constant is the inverse . Incidentally, the dimension of is again [energy]−2. However, appears in the denominator within its Lagrangian, as opposed to , which appears in the numerator.
That both and are dimensionful makes the corresponding theories nonrenormalisable. However, since both are effective theories representing low-energy limits of more fundamental theories, nonrenormalisability is not an issue.
All these hints make one suspect that gravity and the weak force could share a common origin, namely the group
within the octonionic theory. That the product of the two coupling constants
and
is
dimensionless suggests the intriguing possibility that Fermi’s theory and general relativity might be each other’s dual under a
duality transformation exchanging the weak and strong coupling regimes. This duality is strongly reminiscent of the analogous dualities put forward in the literature [
13,
14].
Altogether, this suggests that one can consider
as the dual of the theory governed by
. Gravity would then appear as the weak dual of the Fermi theory, with the latter being its strong counterpart. Mention should also be made of the various attempts made in the past towards gravi-weak unification [
15].
Further evidence of a possible connection between the
gauge symmetry and gravity comes from the work of Ashtekar [
16], Krasnov [
17], and Woit [
18,
19]. There is also the appealing fact that
(i.e., dark electro-grav) is a renormalisable gauge theory, similar to the electroweak theory
.
The cosmological setting for our proposal of dark electromagnetism is as follows [
20]. Subsequent to the Big Bang creation event, the Universe undergoes an inflation-like expansion. The expansion begins with a Planck-scale acceleration of ∼
, with the acceleration decreasing inversely with the expanding scale factor. One input taken from observations is that the Universe has
particles and hence a total mass of about
g. The inflating epoch undergoes a phase transition, where the decreasing acceleration equals the surface gravity of a black hole with the same mass as that of the observed Universe. This acceleration happens to be of the same order as the critical MOND acceleration of ∼
, as well as the acceleration of the current Universe. Hence, there is an inflation of the scale factor by 61 orders of magnitude before the inflation-like phase ends. (Incidentally, this inflation by 61 orders of magnitude reduces the cosmological constant— dimensionally inverse squared length—by 122 orders of magnitude, to the same order as its currently observed value). This phase transition also signifies a quantum-to-classical transition, and because the black hole surface gravity is now higher than the inflationary acceleration, classical inhomogeneous structures begin to form, and classical spacetime, obeying the laws of general relativity, emerges. This transition also embodies the electroweak symmetry breaking and the dark electro-grav symmetry breaking. Near compact objects, GR, emerging from the broken
symmetry, dominates, whereas far from compact objects (once the induced acceleration falls below the critical MOND acceleration) the unbroken symmetry
of dark electromagnetism dominates. This latter scenario represents the deep MOND regime. Thus, in the presence of compact objects, the de Sitter horizon does not immediately yield to GR; rather the MOND zone mediates between the GR zone and the horizon. It is as if there is a phase transition between the GR zone and the MOND zone (similar to Verlinde’s ideas [
1]). This could potentially be elucidated through a generalisation of ‘GR as thermodynamics’ to ‘(GR + MOND) as thermodynamics’ of an unbroken symmetry phase transforming into a broken symmetry phase. The GR-dominated phase manifests as the broken symmetry phase and is stiff, whereas the MOND phase represents the unbroken symmetry phase and is elastic—the deep MOND region carries a memory of the unbroken inflation-like phase, as well as the currently accelerating Universe.
We note that grand unified theory (GUT) models based on
symmetry have been previously considered by several researchers [
21,
22,
23], and the significance of
has been noted repeatedly (it is the only exceptional Lie group that has complex representations). Our proposal, the octonionic theory, is not a GUT. We propose an
unification of standard model forces with gravitation, and we predict two new forces,
and
. The inflation-like expansion resets the scale of quantum gravity from the Planck scale to the scale of electroweak symmetry breaking, i.e., ∼1 TeV. This is also the scale of the breaking of the dark electro-grav symmetry
, when spacetime and gravitation emerge from the pre-quantum, pre-spacetime theory. Relativistic MOND
also emerges at this epoch.
The term dark electromagnetism/dark radiation/dark photon is sometimes used to refer to a hypothetical radiation that mediates interactions between dark matter particles. In our proposal, however, this dark radiation mediates a fifth force between ordinary baryonic matter particles (and, of course, between leptons as well). There is no dark matter in our theory unless one wishes to refer to the dark photons of DEM as dark matter.
3. A Brief Review of MOND and Relativistic MOND
The flattened rotation curves of galaxies are non-Keplerian [
24], and it has been observed that a departure of the rotation curve from Newtonian gravity sets in whenever the observed acceleration falls below the following universal value,
[
4]:
where
is the observed cosmic acceleration. This discrepancy between Newtonian gravitation and the observed rotation curves can be explained by postulating that galaxies are surrounded by halos of dark matter. However, it seems difficult to understand why the dark matter distribution becomes important precisely below the above-mentioned critical acceleration (instead of beyond a critical distance from the galactic centre) and why this critical acceleration should be so close to the observed cosmic acceleration. There is also the possibility that a new fundamental force (let us call it the fifth force) becomes more significant than Newtonian gravitation whenever the acceleration
a falls far below the critical acceleration
. With this in mind, in 1983, Milgrom proposed that the acceleration
a experienced by a test body of mass
m in the presence of a source mass
M could be given by the following phenomenological law:
In other words, the fifth force starts to dominate over Newtonian gravitation at sub-critical accelerations. This proposal is known as Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) [
4]. We do not interpret it as the breakdown of Newtonian gravitation/general relativity at low accelerations, but rather as the fifth force dominating Newtonian gravity. The test body of mass
m universally experiences Newtonian gravity along with the fifth force due to the presence of the mass
M. The acceleration due to both forces is independent of the mass
m of the test particle, but the fifth force is proportional to the square root of the source mass
M and falls inversely with distance (∼
) as if it were the square root of Newtonian gravitation (∼
). Subsequently, we view the MOND relation
as a consequence of the introduction of the effective distance
. This latter choice makes MOND analogous to Coulomb’s law and paves the way for relativistic MOND as a
symmetry with the square root of mass as its source.
An analogy could be made to the electroweak symmetry, which breaks down to the weak force and electrodynamics. An electron in the presence of another electron experiences both the weak force and the much stronger Coulomb force. At energy scales approaching the electroweak scale of ∼1 Tev, the two forces have nearly equal strength and then become unified. At lower energies, the electric force dominates over the weak force, but this does not mean that the weak force law breaks down at low energies; it just means that the weak force is comparatively weaker. Analogously, the MOND force (i.e., the fifth force) dominates over Newtonian gravity (GR) at low accelerations, but this does not imply that GR is breaking down. In our work, MOND is to gravitation what electrodynamics is to the weak force. Electrodynamics (MOND) dominates over the weak force (GR) at low energies (accelerations). At high accelerations, the fifth force and GR unify (the dark electro-grav symmetry ).
The MOND phenomenology cannot derive the interpolating function between the Newtonian regime and the deep MOND regime: that can only come from the deeper theory from which MOND originates. Thus, one introduces the unspecified interpolation function
, relating the Newtonian acceleration
to the MOND acceleration
g as
If one does not wish to introduce MOND as a fifth force, it can be presented as a modified Poissonian gravity [
25] by modifying the left-hand side of the Poisson equation, with
.
This modified Poisson equation can be derived from the following Lagrangian [
26]:
Khoury notes the following: “However, as a theory of a fundamental scalar field, the non-analytic form of the kinetic term is somewhat unpalatable”. For the same reason, one might be sceptical about modifying the left-hand side of the Poisson equation; doing so will make it harder to relate MOND to other fundamental interactions and to find a generalisation of GR that reduces to MOND in the non-relativistic limit at low accelerations. We prefer to derive MOND from a Poisson equation in which the left-hand side is intact as the conventional Laplacian and the right-hand side is a new source charge for a fifth force.
Nonetheless, Milgrom [
25] wrote the following:
“Very interestingly, its deep-MOND limit,
is invariant under space conformal transformations (Milgrom, 1997) [
27]: Namely, besides its obvious invariance to translations and rotations, Equation (
8) is invariant to dilatations,
for any constant
[under which
], and to inversion about a sphere of any radius
a, centred at any point
, namely, to
with
, and
, where
J is the Jacobian of the transformation (
9). This ten-parameter conformal symmetry group of Equation (
8) is known to be the same as the isometry (geometric symmetry) group of a 4-dimensional de Sitter spacetime, with possible deep implications, perhaps pointing to another connection of MOND with cosmology (Milgrom, 2009a) [
28].”
This important fact about MOND is very encouraging for us because our proposed symmetry is indeed the leftover unbroken symmetry from the de Sitter-like phase that precedes the dark electro-grav symmetry breaking. This correspondence with de Sitter provides justification for the use of the effective distance because doing so enables the aforesaid invariance under dilatations.
MOND can also be presented as a modification of the law of inertia instead of as a modification of the law of gravitation:
In our proposal in this paper, MOND arises from a new (fifth) force obeying a modified law of inertia. Thus, both the law of gravitation and the law of inertia are modified at low accelerations.
There have been several serious attempts to develop relativistic MOND, i.e., to generalise general relativity to a modified relativistic theory of gravitation, from which MOND will emerge in the non-relativistic approximation, for accelerations
. These include the TeVeS theory developed by Bekenstein [
29], which includes a vector field and a scalar field in addition to the spacetime metric. TeVeS was originally claimed to be able to explain gravitational lensing and other cosmological observations but is seriously constrained by observations in the solar system and binary stars [
25]. Another prominent relativistic MOND was proposed by Skordis and Zlosnik, dubbed RMOND, which was claimed to be able to explain CMB anisotropies and the matter power spectrum [
30].
Our reservation about these otherwise noteworthy relativistic generalisations is that they were expressly designed to meet the requirements of a relativistic MOND and are not easy to motivate from first principles. The vector field and scalar field introduced in TeVeS are difficult to relate to the standard model of particle physics. The quantum field theoretic constraints on such theories are also challenging. On the other hand, the proposed by us as RelMOND is a fallout of the unification and was not designed to explain MOND. The use of comes from consideration of masses of quarks and leptons of the first fermion generation. Furthermore, the gauge symmetry is likely to be a renormalizable quantum field theory.
There is an extensive paper and review on MOND and its extensive applications; we do not intend to review it here. The excellent SCHOLARPEDIA article by Milgrom is up to date and reviews MOND and its applications in all its aspects [
25].
However, we make mention of ongoing related research of great importance: testing the law of gravitation in GAIA DR3 wide binaries [
31,
32,
33]. A large number of such binaries are known in the solar neighbourhood of the Milky Way and have orbital radii ranging from about 200 AU to 30,000 AU. The orbital acceleration crosses the critical MOND value
for radii around 1000 AU, transiting from the Newtonian regime (relatively low radii) to the alleged MOND regime (large radii). Around 2000 AU onwards, the measured acceleration should disagree with Newtonian prediction if MOND is right. The analyses by Chae [
34,
35] and Hernandez [
36,
37] show that Newtonian gravitation is obeyed in the not-so-wide binaries but breaks down for larger separations. However, Banik et al. disagreed [
38] (see Chae’s critical response to Banik [
35] and the responses of Lasenby, Boyle, and especially Hernandez, after the recent OSMU23 lecture by Banik [
39]; see also the recent rebuttal by Hernandez and Chae [
40]). Our understanding is that the conclusions of both Chae and Hernandez, that Newtonian gravitation breaks down below the critical acceleration
, are correct. It is remarkable that wide binaries have the same critical acceleration scale
as spiral galaxies: there is no a priori reason for this to be so unless the fifth force does indeed exist and begins to dominate over gravitation below
. This anomaly in wide binaries cannot be explained by dark matter; therefore, wide binaries are the likely smoking gun that will discriminate MOND from dark matter.
We also note that not all researchers agree on the presence of a universal critical acceleration scale in galaxies. In their analysis of 193 disk galaxies from the SPARC and THINGS databases, Rodrigues et al. concluded the absence of a fundamental acceleration scale in galaxies [
41], whereas in an accompanying paper, Gaugh et al. performed a Bayesian analysis1 on galaxy rotation curves from the SPARC database, finding strong evidence for a characteristic acceleration scale [
42] (see also the critical analysis in [
43] and the references therein). Our outlook is that these analyses are part of an ongoing debate, and for the purpose of our present theoretical discussion, we will assume that a fundamental acceleration scale does exist on galactic scales.
Dark matter is a cornerstone assumption in contemporary cosmology, supported by evidence from galaxy rotation curves, gravitational lensing of bullet clusters, CMB fluctuations, baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs), and the formation of large-scale structures. Therefore, it is important to assess how MOND fares vis-a-vis these aspects as an alternative to dark matter. MOND does spectacularly well with galaxy rotation curves, being able to predict the rotation curve once the baryonic mass distribution of a galaxy is known from observations. In this regard, it does better than the cold dark matter hypothesis, where a rotation curve has to be first known from observations, and then a CDM distribution is assumed so as to fit the curve of velocities. MOND also provides a natural explanation for the Tully–Fisher relation, which is a challenge for CDM. MOND does not adequately account for cluster velocity dispersions, whereas CDM certainly does better. However, it has been suggested that MOND’s shortfall on cluster scales could be accounted for by the missing baryons that are currently unaccounted for in clusters.
CDM has a definite upper hand when it comes to the formation of large-scale structures, CMB anisotropies, BAOs, and gravitational lensing. Here, one is in need of a convincing relativistic MOND that generalises general relativity at low accelerations and can then be convincingly applied in cosmology. The present proposal for dark electromagnetism is a step in that direction. For a detailed recent review of the status of MOND in astrophysics and cosmology, we refer the reader to Banik and Zhao [
44].
5. Dark Electromagnetism as the Origin of Relativistic MOND
We demonstrate that MOND can be written as Coulomb’s law analogous to Maxwell’s electrodynamics by using an effective distance. Energy conservation, along with a modified inertia law, can then be used to show that, when written as Coulomb’s law, MOND mimics cold dark matter, including on cosmological scales. Furthermore, in the deep MOND regime, this formulation is the non-relativistic limit of the gauge theory.
We have in the deep MOND regime that the acceleration
a of a test particle in the field of a mass
M is given by
where
is Milgrom’s acceleration constant and
is the MOND radius.
We will assume that the MOND force
F on the test particle of mass
m can be obtained by multiplying the acceleration by
. We write the force in terms of dimensionless masses to try to make it look more and more like electrodynamics:
Assuming that we live in a de Sitter universe, we multiply and divide by the Hubble radius
, which is also the de Sitter horizon, and we introduce the effective distance
given by
.
Now, this looks like Coulumb’s law in terms of the effective distance
. If a spatial point
is at a distance
from the observer, it has to be stretched by a factor
. We can discuss the covariance of this procedure, but in a Robertson–Walker universe with cosmic time, this procedure seems well defined.
We assume that the Milgrom constant
is
times the cosmic acceleration
and also that
is the scaling down of the Planck acceleration due to the de Sitter expansion. Thus,
. We can hence write the force as
where
The factor of
is deliberately introduced to achieve consistency with Verlinde’s result and consistently derive the famous factor of
, which relates Milgrom’s constant to the cosmic acceleration. We will take (
40) as the defining force law of the
interaction, with
A as defined in (
41), including the factor of
. MOND is to be derived from this force law, even though initially, we started from MOND to motivate this Coulomb-like force law.
Below, we consider generalising this to a fully relativistic theory for the square-root mass current. The theory can be expected to be derivable from an action principle, similar to Maxwell electrodynamics. For now, let us continue with the spherically symmetric Coulomb case.
This force law has an interesting parallel with, and an important difference from, Maxwell’s electrodynamics. We can write Coulomb’s law as . Here, the charge is expressed in dimensionless units, so multiplication by appears, similar to the above gravity case. However, the gravitational coupling is scaled by a factor dependent on the epoch via the Hubble radius (with the understanding that , and any epoch dependence would come from the in-principle-allowed time variation of the cosmic acceleration). Gravity uses the effective distance, which is like a scaling of the actual distance.
The introduction of a characteristic acceleration (
) related to the Hubble constant implies variability over time, suggesting that galaxies at different redshifts would exhibit distinct rotation curves. This aspect has been carefully discussed, for instance, in the MOND review by Milgrom [
25] (see the subsection on ‘The Significance of the MOND Acceleration Constant’; see also [
49], where high-redshift rotation curves are discussed in the context of MOND). Milgrom concluded that there are strong observational constraints on the variation of
with cosmic time, and a value of
at
was essentially ruled out, hence excluding a dependence such as
.
The force law can be derived from a potential
via
so that
We would now like to note the energy conservation equation in the deep MOND regime given this potential, and from this equation derive Verlinde’s central equation in his paper [
1], Equation (7.40). The energy conservation equation is obtained by starting from the equation of motion for the test mass
m at
R with a velocity of
.
The left-hand side of this equation is a modified inertia law and, in fact, is such that the MOND acceleration is independent of the square-root mass of the test particle. Thus, we still have the equivalence principle, but this time arising from the cancellation of square-root mass when the dark charge is identified with the inertial square-root mass.
Multiplying both sides by
v and noting that
, we can write
If we make the crucial assumption that the time dependence of
can be ignored, this equation can be integrated to obtain the following expression for conserved energy after substituting the form of the potential:
As done in the Newtonian derivation of the Friedmann equation (converting force law into energy conservation), we equate the right-hand side term to the source term of the Einstein equations, as if sourced by an apparent dark matter distribution
(Verlinde’s notation):
assuming a constant density and a uniform apparent dark matter distribution. Squaring both sides gives
which is consistent with Verlinde’s equation in [
1], Equation (7.40), if we assume
. From here, following Verlinde, the MOND law can be easily derived.
It seems interesting that we yield the same result for apparent dark matter as Verlinde. This can be considered support for the proposed symmetry. Furthermore, the introduction of the effective distance can be interpreted as a stretching of the distance R to the larger distance and reminds us of an elastic medium. We should explore how to relate our effective distance to Verlinde’s elasticity approach to MOND, as the two might be related to each other. Note that the amount of apparent dark matter is proportional to the square root of the actual matter M. We hope to derive these results from first principles in future work.
Now, we can also try to prove that the total amount of apparent dark matter is about five times that of ordinary matter. Verlinde’s Equation (7.40) is
Assuming a uniform density
, one can integrate the left-hand side after expressing mass in terms of density, to obtain
The last equality follows by considering the entire Universe and writing the mass
M in terms of density, assuming critical density
, which gives
. For
R, we have assumed that the value of the Hubble radius is
, which is also the de Sitter horizon.
This is the contribution to apparent dark matter from the Coulomb part of the potential energy. If we assume that each of the three vector components also contributes equally, we deduce that the total apparent dark matter is times ordinary matter. This agrees well with the standard LCDM model, according to which the dark matter to ordinary matter ratio is about . The assumption that the vector components contribute equally, as the Coulomb part, is reasonable because these considerations are being applied on the scale of the entire Universe, including at high redshifts. Therefore, relativistic motions must be taken into account, and as a result, the ‘magnetic part’ of the four-potential is expected to be as significant as the Coulomb part.
A very important point is that only particles with non-zero rest mass take part in dark electromagnetism, just as only particles with non-zero electric charge take part in electromagnetism. Hence, there is no interaction between photons and baryonic matter. From this point of view, the apparent dark matter derived above perfectly mimics dark matter. It will produce an additional gravitation-like attraction but will not have any impact on the CMB anisotropy produced by baryons interacting with electromagnetic radiation on the last scattering surface. We can, as usual, study the growth of linear density perturbations by working with apparent density fluctuations in apparent dark matter.
Furthermore, the potential energy of the dark electromagnetic field serves as a source on the right-hand side of the Einstein equations, similar to cold dark matter. Therefore, insofar as causing gravitational lensing is concerned, the DEM field mimics cold dark matter.
The non-relativistic limit of dark electromagnetism (dark equivalent of Coulomb’s law) proposed above is the limit of relativistic dark electromagnetism, modelled after Maxwell’s electrodynamics.
We propose the following action principle for dark electromagnetism and general relativity, entirely modelled after the action for Maxwell’s electrodynamics coupled to sources in curved spacetime. The electromagnetic field is replaced with the DEM field.
The last term couples the dark electromagnetic potential
to the current density
of square-root mass, obtained by multiplying the latter by four velocities. The coupling constant
A was defined earlier in Equation (
41), wherein
is to be understood as
. The source for gravity is the energy-momentum tensor of mass and the energy-momentum tensor of the dark field. The dark current is given by
Here, the spatial distance
is the effective distance, i.e.,
, whereas time
corresponds to the cosmic time used in the Robertson–Walker metric and Friedmann equations. The dark potential is also a function of the effective spatial distance
, not of
. Thus, if we define
, then
. The interaction term of the dark current does not contribute to the energy-momentum tensor that appears on the right-hand side of the Einstein equations because the
in the denominator of the expression for current density cancels the
in the numerator in the expression for interaction action (last term in the above action). This is the same as in Maxwell’s electrodynamics, but in the present case of dark electromagnetism, it has profound significance. Specifically, the source term for GR (being the energy-momentum tensor proportional to mass
m) is distinct from the source term for dark electromagnetism, being the current density of square-root mass. Two masses
and
interact, both via GR and DEM, with one interaction dominating over the other depending on the magnitude of the acceleration. Furthermore, the introduction of the effective distance in DEM and the specific use of cosmic time breaks Lorentz invariance. DEM as relativistic MOND adopts a specific reference frame, which we define as the rest frame of the CMB.
The second-last term is the action for the DEM field, which is derived from its field tensor and also interacts with gravitation. Its energy-momentum tensor contributes as a source in the Einstein field equations. By varying the action with respect to the metric we obtain Einstein’s field equations sourced by dust and the DEM field. Varying it with respect to the DEM field yields Maxwell-like equations that couple the DEM field to the current density of square-root mass. Finally, varying it with respect to particle position yields the geodesic equation of motion, which now also includes the effect of the DEM field as an external non-gravitational force.
More explicitly, variation of action yields the Einstein equations
and Maxwell-like equations, sourced by the current density of square-root mass, all written as functions of the effective spatial distance and cosmic time:
The solution to this equation determines the DEM field, which then enters the Einstein equations as a source, as an alternative to dark matter. This source term is the potential energy of the DEM field, and it represents the enhanced gravitational interaction amongst baryons without the need to invoke dark matter to provide the sought-after additional gravitational effects. The right-hand side of Equation (
45) is an illustration of this claim.
The geodesic equation also includes an external force (so the motion becomes non-geodesic), with the Maxwell-like force being proportional to the square-root mass (analogous to the electric charge) and a function of the effective spatial distance
As and when the effects of DEM become insignificant, Lorentz invariance and GR are recovered, as expected. These field equations reduce (in the Newtonian approximation and the homogeneous isotropic cosmological approximation) to the analysis in
Section 5.
The treatment of the exact field equations is left for future work. If such an analysis can be performed, it might even yield the sought-after interpolating function that mediates between Newtonian gravitation and MOND.
Milgrom [
28] wrote that “…one may conjecture that the MOND-cosmology connection is such that local gravitational physics would take exactly the deep-MOND form in an exact de Sitter universe. This is based on the equality of the symmetry groups of
and of the MOND limit of the Bekenstein–Milgrom formulation [
50] both groups being
. The fact that today we see locally a departure from the exact MOND-limit physics, i.e., that the interpolating functions have the form they have and that
is finite and serves as a transition acceleration, stems from the departure of our actual spacetime from exact
geometry: The broken symmetry of our space-time is thus echoed in the broken symmetry of local physics”. Our proposal, suggesting that
is the remnant unbroken symmetry after the breaking of
, aligns entirely with Milgrom’s conjecture.
A few further remarks about the proposed action principle in Equation (
50) are needed. This form of the action is assumed to come into play after the electroweak symmetry breaking around a TeV scale, that is, the epoch at which classical spacetime, general relativity, and dark electromagnetism (i.e., relativistic MOND) emerge. This emergence is expected to yield the same physical results as standard Big Bang cosmology, with cold dark matter exchanged for dark electromagnetism. Prior to this emergence, cosmology is governed by the unified
theory above the TeV scale. Since cosmological data are not yet available at such high-energy scales, there is no contradiction between the octonionic theory and the cosmology of the very early Universe.
7. Coupling Constants in the Dark Electro-Grav Theory
For the electroweak sector
, the derived fundamental constants are the low-energy fine structure constant
and the weak mixing angle (Weinberg angle)
, with the latter being the solution of the trigonometric Equation (
56) in our paper [
5]. The fine structure constant is constructed from the parameters
and
L appearing in the Lagrangian of the theory, as depicted, e.g., in Equation (
6) in the aforementioned paper. The constants of the electroweak sector can be expressed in terms of the fine structure constant and the weak mixing angle, along with the value of the Higgs mass
, whose value is predicted from cosmological downscaling (caused by the de Sitter-like inflationary expansion) from the original Planck scale value of the Higgs mass. It is significant that the standard model Higgs comes from the right sector in the left–right symmetric model (whereas the standard model forces arise from the left sector). The second Higgs, associated with the left sector, is a newly predicted Higgs that is electrically charged.
Thus, the weak isospin g (i.e., the coupling) is given by , and the weak hypercharge (the coupling) is given by . The Higgs mass is estimated as follows. When the mass ratios are computed in the octonionic theory, we assume that the lightest of the masses, i.e., the electron mass, is one in Planck units. Likewise, the charge of the down-quark, which is the smallest electric charge, is set to one while determining the fine structure constant. Hence, the Higgs mass is initially about GeV because the Higgs is a composite of standard model fermions and is expected to obtain maximum contribution from the up-quark, which, at about 173 GeV, is about heavier than the electron. An inflation by a factor of scales this mass down by a factor of to the value of about GeV. This sets the weak coupling Fermi constant (where GeV is the Higgs VEV) to about GeV−2, whereas the experimentally measured value for the Fermi constant is about GeV−2.
This derivation of the reduced coupling constant enables us to obtain a reasonable estimate of the W boson mass from first principles. We also observe that the Fermi constant has dimensions of length squared (same as ) and can be written as . The scaling down of the W mass from its Planck scale value is responsible for the weak force becoming so much stronger than gravitation. In this theory, remains unchanged with the epoch.
Knowing
, the mass of the
Z boson is determined conventionally by the relation
. This way, we have a handle on the fundamental constants and parameters of the electroweak sector, including the Higgs mass, Fermi constant, fine structure constant, weak mixing angle, masses of weak bosons, weak isospin, and hypercharge. To understand why there are sixty-one orders of magnitude of inflation, which ends at the electroweak scale, please see [
20]. The same result is also supported by the idea that the electroweak symmetry is broken below a critical acceleration (see
Section 8 below).
Let us now discuss the coupling constants and parameters of the right-handed dark electro-grav (DEM) sector, , staying as close as possible to the above discussion for the electroweak sector. The DEM symmetry is broken along with the electroweak symmetry. It can also be shown using the electric charge operator, i.e., the number operator that is associated with the symmetry, that and have electric charges of and , respectively, and that is electrically neutral. The corresponding situation for the symmetry is interesting because here, the number operator associated with defines the square root of mass (in Planck mass units); it does not define the electric charge. Consequently, and have square root masses of and , respectively; hence, their range of interaction is limited to the Planck length. They will also have an extremely tiny electric charge, some seventeen orders of magnitude smaller than the charge of the electron (analogous to the W mass being so small on the Planck scale). Conversely, the boson (and the dark photon it transforms to) will have zero mass and zero electric charge. will be massless and will have an extremely tiny electric charge (like the bosons). It is possible that emergent gravitation is mediated at the quantum level by the and the dark photon, effectively replacing the role of the spin-2 graviton in this theory.
The place of the fine structure constant is assumed by the mass of the electron. The Weinberg angle satisfies the same equation and hence has the same value as in the electroweak case. Thus, the right-sector analogues of the couplings
g and
can be obtained. GR is the result of the breaking of the
symmetry (i.e., the quantum-to-classical transition). The remaining unbroken symmetry is dark electromagnetism
, which is the proposed origin of relativistic MOND. The cosmological origin of MOND is briefly discussed in [
20].
During the de Sitter-like inflationary phase, symmetry is operational and includes, as a subset, the unbroken electroweak symmetry , as well as the dark electro-grav symmetry . Below the critical acceleration, these symmetries are broken, giving rise to the emergence of classical spacetime (precipitated by the localisation of fermions). Near compact objects, the gravitationally induced acceleration (GR/Newton) is higher than the critical acceleration and GR dominates. In the far zone, the acceleration is below the critical acceleration: this is the deep MOND regime where the unbroken symmetry of dark electromagnetism dominates. This zone acts as a buffer between the de Sitter horizon and the GR zone, and it was also identified in Verlinde’s work using his entropy considerations.
All left-handed particles take part in the weak force, and all electrically charged particles take part in electromagnetism. Analogously, all right-handed particles take part in the interaction, whereas all particles with non-zero square-root mass take part in dark electromagnetism.