The missing mass problem has driven decades of search for collisionless dark matterparticles, yet direct detection efforts have yielded null results. In this paper, we propose aparadigm shift: the Dynamical Interaction-driven Vacuum Event (DIVE) model. We positthat dark matter is not an independent elementary particle, but rather the localized macro-scopic rendering of the quantum vacuum’s effective mass, dynamically triggered when thebaryonic gauge flux crosses a critical holographic threshold (F ≥ Fc). At the galactic scale,the DIVE model naturally reproduces the empirical successes of the Tully-Fisher relationand modified Newtonian dynamics purely from vacuum state reduction. At high-energyastrophysical scales, thermodynamic vacuum screening elegantly explains the spatial off-set in the Bullet Cluster, while localized vacuum annihilation accurately accounts for theGalactic Center GeV Excess. Furthermore, through high-resolution 2D N-body simulations,we demonstrate that the macroscopic Cosmic Web dynamically emerges from a pure bary-onic plasma without pre-existing dark matter seeds. Ultimately, to provide a definitive andempirically testable falsification boundary, we computationally predict a novel kinematicsignature: local flux obstruction by galactic dust lanes will quench the vacuum render-ing, inducing a measurable 13% rotation curve asymmetry and a distinct orbital velocity‘crossover’. This provides a clear, purely internal mechanism to empirically validate theDIVE framework in upcoming high-resolution surveys
Sungbin Park (Fri,) studied this question.
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