2 research outputs found
Continuous matter creation and the acceleration of the universe: the growth of density fluctuations
Cosmologies including continuous matter creation are able to reproduce the
main properties of the standard CDM model, in particular in cases
where the particle and entropy production rates are equal. These specific
models, characterized by a mass density equal to the critical value, behave
like the standard CDM model at early times whereas their late
evolution is similar to the steady-state cosmology. The maximum amplitude of
density fluctuations in these models depends on the adopted creation rate,
related here to the parameter and this limitation could be a
difficulty for the formation of galaxies and large-scale structure in this
class of universe. Additional problems are related with predictions either of
the random peculiar velocities of galaxies or the present density of massive
clusters of galaxies, both being largely overestimated with respect to
observational data.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in General Relativity
and Gravitatio
Visser's Massive Gravity Bimetric Theory Revisited
A massive gravity theory was proposed by Visser in the late nineties. This
theory, based on a backgroung metric and on an usual
dynamical metric has the advantage of being free of ghosts
as well as discontinuities present in other massive theories proposed in the
past. In the present investigation, the equations of Visser's theory are
revisited with a particular care on the related conservation laws.\ It will be
shown that a multiplicative factor is missing in the graviton tensor originally
derived by Visser, which has no incidence on the weak field approach but
becomes important in the strong field regime when, for instance, cosmological
applications are considered. In this case, contrary to some previous claims
found in the literature, we conclude that a non-static background metric is
required in order to obtain a solution able to mimic the CDM
cosmology.Comment: 10 pages - Accepted for publication in Physical Review