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Cosmological perturbations and observational constraints on nonlocal massive gravity

Abstract

Nonlocal massive gravity can provide an interesting explanation for the late-time cosmic acceleration, with a dark energy equation of state wDEw_{\rm DE} smaller than 1-1 in the past. We derive the equations of linear cosmological perturbations to confront such models with the observations of large-scale structures. The effective gravitational coupling to nonrelativistic matter associated with galaxy clusterings is close to Newton's gravitational constant GG for a mass scale mm slightly smaller than today's Hubble parameter H0H_0. Taking into account the background expansion history as well as the evolution of matter perturbations δm\delta_m, we test for these models with Type Ia Supernovae (SnIa) from Union 2.1, the cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurements from Planck, a collection of baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), and the growth rate data of δm\delta_m. Using a higher value of H0H_0 derived from its direct measurement (H070H_0 \gtrsim 70 km s1^{-1} Mpc1^{-1}) the data strongly support the nonlocal massive gravity model (1.1wDE1.04-1.1 \lesssim w_{\rm DE} \lesssim -1.04 in the past) over the Λ\LambdaCDM model (wDE=1w_{\rm DE}=-1), whereas for a lower prior (67 km s1^{-1} Mpc1^{-1} \lesssim H070H_0 \lesssim 70 km s1^{-1} Mpc1^{-1}) the two models are statistically comparable.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, changes match published versio

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