Resumen:
General relativity (GR) is the most successful theory of gravity, with great observational support on local scales.
However, to keep GR valid over cosmic scales, some phenomena require the assumption of exotic dark matter,
especially the cosmic expansion history and flat rotation curves of galaxies. Their radial acceleration relation
(RAR) indicates a tight correlation between the dynamical mass and the baryonic mass. This suggests that galactic
observations could be better explained by modified gravity theories without exotic matter. Modified Newtonian
dynamics (MOND) is an alternative theory that was originally designed to do exactly this using a new
fundamental acceleration scale, a0, the so-called Milgromian parameter. However, this nonrelativistic model lacks
the flexibility needed to account for the wide variety of observed phenomena. In contrast, a relativistic MOND like gravity naturally emerges from the hyperconical model, which derives a fictitious acceleration compatible
with observations. We analyze the compatibility of the hyperconical model with respect to distinct RAR
observations of 10 galaxy clusters obtained from HIFLUGCS and 60 high-quality SPARC galaxy rotation curves.
The results show that a general relation can be fitted to most cases with only one or two parameters, with an
acceptable ¿2 and p-value. These findings suggest a possible way to complete the proposed modification of GR on
cosmic scales.