Abstract
Current cosmological observations allow for deviations from the standard growth of large-scale structures in the universe. These deviations could indicate modifications to General Relativity on cosmological scales or suggest the dynamical nature of dark energy. It is important to characterize these departures in a model-independent manner to understand their significance objectively and explore their fundamental causes more generically across a wider spectrum of theories and models. In this paper, we compress the information from redshift-space distortion data into 2-3 parameters µi, which control the ratio between the effective gravitational coupling in Poisson’s equation and Newton’s constant in several redshift bins in the late universe. We test the efficiency of this compression using mock final-year data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) and considering three different models within the class of effective field theories of dark energy. The constraints on the parameters of these models, obtained from both the direct fit to the data and the projection of the compressed parameters onto the parameters of the models, are fully consistent, demonstrating the method’s good performance. a Then, we apply it to current data and find hints of a suppressed matter growth in the universe at ∼ 2.7σ C.L., in full accordance with previous works in the literature. Finally, we perform a forecast with DESI data and show that the uncertainties on the parameters µ1 at z < 1 and µ2 at 1 < z < 3 are expected to decrease by approximately 40% and 20%, respectively, compared to those obtained with current data. Additionally, we project these forecasted constraints onto the parameters of the aforesaid models.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics |
Publication status | Accepted for publication - 11 Nov 2024 |
Keywords
- astro-ph.CO
- gr-qc
- UKRI
- STFC
- ST/W001225/1