Dark matter and old shell theorem

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From an outsiders view, it appears that the old shell theorem is relevant to the dark matter issue: If one views a spherical cluster of galaxies as an interconnected structure, gravity would increase linearly with distance from the center and be greatest at the edge of the cluster.
For a spiral galaxy, that is more like a disk, there would be much less variation with distance ( a flat disk having none at all ) and orbital velocities should still be higher than expected when denying the applicability of the shell theorem.

I am wondering weather this proposition has been discussed anywhere and, if so, where? I would like to read up on it.

Thank you in advance.
 
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The proposition I have in mind is that "dark matter might be explained by applying the shell theorem". And, thank you for the link.
 
As you can see in the linked material, shell theorem is very much used in modelling galactic gravitational potentials - for those components that can be approximated as spherically symmetric matter distributions.
Once you add all the different components, you end up with a potential that is insufficient to explain the rotational velocities. Hence the need for dark matter.
When modelling galactic dark matter distribution as a spherically symmetric halo, you'd once again use the shell theorem.

It is a pretty basic piece of physics, after all.
 
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