Does Bulk Viscosity Create a Viable Unified Dark Matter Model?
Baojiu Li, John D. Barrow

TL;DR
This paper explores whether a single viscous fluid can unify dark matter and dark energy, showing it mimics standard cosmology but faces observational challenges due to rapid perturbation damping and potential conflicts with data.
Contribution
It demonstrates that a bulk viscous fluid can replicate the background evolution of LCDM but highlights issues with perturbations and observational consistency, distinguishing it from other unified models.
Findings
Background cosmology mimics LCDM with suitable parameters.
Density perturbations are rapidly damped during acceleration transition.
Model faces challenges fitting observational data like CMB and weak lensing.
Abstract
We investigate in detail the possibility that a single imperfect fluid with bulk viscosity can replace the need for separate dark matter and dark energy in cosmological models. With suitable choices of model parameters, we show that the background cosmology in this model can mimic that of a LCDM Universe to high precision. However, as the cosmic expansion goes through the decelerating-accelerating transition, the density perturbations in this fluid are rapidly damped out. We show that,although this does not significantly affect structure formation in baryonic matter, it makes the gravitational potential decay rapidly at late times, leading to modifications in predictions of cosmological observables such as the CMB power spectrum and weak lensing. This model of unified dark matter is thus difficult to reconcile with astronomical observations. We also clarify the differences with respect…
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