4.6 Article

Nonlinear structure formation in the cubic Galileon gravity model

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2013/10/027

Keywords

modified gravity; power spectrum; cosmological simulations; dark energy theory

Funding

  1. FCT-Portugal [SFRH/BD/75791/2011]
  2. Royal Astronomical Society
  3. Durham University
  4. Polish National Science Center [DEC-2011/01/D/5T9/01960]
  5. ERC
  6. European Union [PITN-GA-2011-289442]
  7. STFC
  8. BIS
  9. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/75791/2011] Funding Source: FCT
  10. STFC [ST/I001166/1, ST/I00162X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  11. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/I001166/1, ST/I00162X/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We model the linear and nonlinear growth of large scale structure in the Cubic Galileon gravity model, by running a suite of N-body cosmological simulations using the ECOSMOG code. Our simulations include the Vainshtein screening effect, which reconciles the Cubic Galileon model with local tests of gravity. In the linear regime, the amplitude of the matter power spectrum increases by similar to 20% with respect to the standard ACDM model today. The modified expansion rate accounts for similar to 15% of this enhancement, while the fifth force is responsible for only similar to 5%. This is because the effective unscreened gravitational strength deviates from standard gravity only at late times, even though it can be twice as large today. In the nonlinear regime (k greater than or similar to 0.1hMpc(-1)), the fifth force leads to only a modest increase (less than or similar to 8%) in the clustering power on all scales due to the very efficient operation of the Vainshtein mechanism. Such a strong effect is typically not seen in other models with the same screening mechanism. The screening also results in the fifth force increasing the number density of halos by less than 10%, on all mass scales. Our results show that the screening does not ruin the validity of linear theory on large scales which anticipates very strong constraints from galaxy clustering data. We also show that, whilst the model gives an excellent match to CMB data on small angular scales (1 greater than or similar to 50), the predicted integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect is in tension with Planck/WMAP results.

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