Viscous dissipative Chaplygin gas dominated homogenous and isotropic cosmological models
C. S. J. Pun, L. \'A. Gergely, M. K. Mak, Z. Kov\'acs, G. M. Szab\'o,, T. Harko

TL;DR
This paper explores a viscous generalized Chaplygin gas model within a flat FRW universe, demonstrating its ability to explain cosmic acceleration and fit supernova data through analytical and numerical analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a bulk viscous term into the Chaplygin gas model and analyzes its cosmological implications using the Israel-Stewart framework, providing a new approach to dark energy modeling.
Findings
Model predicts an accelerating universe at large times
Fits well with recent supernova observations
Provides a scalar field potential for the viscous Chaplygin fluid
Abstract
The generalized Chaplygin gas, which interpolates between a high density relativistic era and a non-relativistic matter phase, is a popular dark energy candidate. We consider a generalization of the Chaplygin gas model, by assuming the presence of a bulk viscous type dissipative term in the effective thermodynamic pressure of the gas. The dissipative effects are described by using the truncated Israel-Stewart model, with the bulk viscosity coefficient and the relaxation time functions of the energy density only. The corresponding cosmological dynamics of the bulk viscous Chaplygin gas dominated universe is considered in detail for a flat homogeneous isotropic Friedmann-Robertson-Walker geometry. For different values of the model parameters we consider the evolution of the cosmological parameters (scale factor, energy density, Hubble function, deceleration parameter and luminosity…
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