292 research outputs found
Chameleon gravity on cosmological scales
In conventional approach to the chameleon mechanism, by assuming a static and
spherically symmetric solutions in which matter density and chameleon field are
given by and , it has been shown that mass of
chameleon field is matter density-dependent. In regions of high matter density
such as earth, chameleon field is massive, in solar system it is low and in
cosmological scales it is very low. In this article we revisit the mechanism in
cosmological scales by assuming a redshift dependence of the matter density and
chameleon field, i.e. , . To support our analysis,
we best fit the model parameters with the observational data. The result shows
that in cosmological scales, the mass of chameleon field increases with the
redshift, i.e. more massive in higher redshifts. We also find that in both
cases of power-law and exponential potential function, the current universe
acceleration can be explained by the low mass chameleon field. In comparison
with the high redshift observational data, we also find that the model with
power-law potential function is in better agreement with the observational
data.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figure
Cosmography in f(T)-gravity
Being based on the only assumption that the universe is homogenous and
isotropic on large scales, cosmography is an ideal tool to investigate the
cosmic expansion history in a almost model-independent way. Fitting the data on
the luminosity distance and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations allows to determine
the confidence ranges for the cosmographic parameters hence giving some
quantitative constraints that a whatever theory has to fulfill. As an
application, we consider here the case of teleparallel gravity (TEGR) also
referred to as f(T)-gravity. To this end, we first work out analytical
expressions to express the present day values of f(T)-derivatives as a function
of the cosmographic parameters which hold under quite general and physically
motivated conditions. We then use the constraints coming from cosmography to
find out the confidence ranges for f(T)-derivatives up to the fifth order and
show how these can be used to check the viability of given TEGR models without
the need to explicitly solve the second order dynamic equations.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Phys. Rev.
On the Dynamics of Bianchi IX cosmological models
A cosmological description of the universe is proposed in the context of
Hamiltonian formulation of a Bianchi IX cosmology minimally coupled to a
massless scalar field. The classical and quantum results are studied with
special attention to the case of closed Friedmann-Robertson-Walker model.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
- …