Galaxy rotation curves and the baryonic Tully–Fisher relation (BTFR) are routinely described in the cold-dark-matter paradigm by fitting galaxy-specific halo profiles, effectively introducing thousands of local degrees of freedom (DOFs) beyond the small number of cosmological parameters. This paper presents the deterministic, 0-pDOF MMA-DMF framework and its audit-grade pipeline for galaxy kinematics. Using a strict edge-on cohort of 15,605 targets from the ALFALFA-40 survey (filtered for morphological reliability, Pedge ≥ 0.80), MMA-DMF predicts a BTFR logarithmic slope of 4.0 without invoking dark matter and achieves a residual scatter of 4.52% in the extreme low-acceleration regime, providing a deterministic, geometric resolution to the fine-tuning problem of the disk-halo relation—without invoking dark matter. Processing a separate, unfiltered HI-selected dataset of 11,521 targets through a rigid sequence of data-hygiene gates quarantines known observational pathologies—face-on systems, active starburst feedback, truncated profiles, and photometric stellar-mass systematics—without allowing any per-galaxy tuning. The final audited pipeline yields NPASS = 2,073, NDATA-REQUIRED = 9,430, and an irreducible residual of NFAIL = 18 (0.16%) retained as a public quality-assurance record. The UDG dichotomy is resolved deterministically through environmental screening, and non-equilibrium systems (e.g., NGC 3109) are handled via a locked scalar memory integrator derived from the Generalized Langevin Equation.
Paulo Adriano (Wed,) studied this question.