Tanelorn said:
Vanadium, I just thought that neither theory would be able to explain the chaotic movement of stars after two galaxies pass by or collide.Since the hoag object is very regular in shape:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoag's_Object
I wondered does MOND and/of CDM accurately predict the rotational velocity of this ring of stars?
The problem is that when it comes to examining objects in the universe, we have to understand the history of the objects to understand what a specific theory predicts what structure it will take.
This is why most of the evidence which contrasts MOND and CDM isn't concerned with why galaxies (and other objects) take on a particular structure, but instead with just how the gravitational attraction in the current structure behaves. For example, star rotation curves don't mention anything about why a galaxy obtained a particular density profile: they are merely concerned with how gravity keeps it in (approximately) that shape.
When it comes to formation, well, galaxy formation in general is an unsolved problem, not because we don't understand gravity, but because it's fantastically difficult to take into account the full effect of the behavior of normal matter (e.g. what impact do supernovae have on galaxy shapes? What about the supermassive black hole at the center?). This isn't to say we know nothing about how galaxies form, but rather that there are lots of big, unsolved questions here.
So when we want to compare gravity theories, the thing to do is focus on observations where these other uncertainties, e.g. regarding galaxy formation and structure, simply do not play a role. This is one reason why the bullet cluster observation is so neat: it's a very clean observation of a pair of galaxy clusters that recently passed through one another, as can be clearly seen by the bow shock of the hot x-ray cluster gas. With about 10 times as much matter in this cluster gas than exists in the normal matter in the galaxies, a modified gravity theory would tend to predict that most of the mass should have been surrounding this hot cluster gas instead of the galaxies. Instead, the galaxies had most of the mass, which indicates that the dark matter (which, like the galaxies, was not slowed by the collision) is what contains most of the mass of these galaxies.
Some alternative gravity theory advocates claim that their theory can explain this without dark matter, but then they require a new species of heavy neutrino (i.e. another sort of dark matter). At that point, the whole enterprise becomes rather ridiculous.