| The Arxiv[0] paper abstract seems much clearer and more informative than the linked article. In particular, it points to WHY the mass has been revised down so far -- there's seemingly a lot less mass at 19+ kiloparsecs (about 62,000 lightyears) from galactic center than we expected the galaxy to have. I'm not an expert so it isn't clear to me if the discussions in the paper about dark-vs-baryonic matter are a theoretical explanation of the gap. Here's a 2019 article[1][1b] describing the mass of the galaxy at 1.5 trillion solar masses. This current research lowers that number to just 200 billion solar masses with a 3 sigma confidence. [0] https://arxiv.org/abs/2309.00048
[1] https://www.sciencealert.com/the-most-accurate-measurement-y...
[1b] https://arxiv.org/abs/1804.11348 |
But might we not have made similar over estimations of baryonic matter at the edges of other galaxies?
If they were true, does it imply there must be even more dark matter than we thought?