Dark Energy From Fifth Dimensional Brans-Dicke Theory
Amir F. Bahrehbakhsh, Mehrdad Farhoudi, Hajar Vakili

TL;DR
This paper explores a five-dimensional Brans-Dicke cosmological model to explain dark energy and universe acceleration, analyzing different interaction scenarios and fitting the model to supernova data.
Contribution
It introduces a novel five-dimensional Brans-Dicke framework with matter-dark energy separation and tests its observational viability.
Findings
Interacting models produce accelerated expansion consistent with observations.
Best-fit parameters suggest a Brans-Dicke coupling constant of -7.75.
The model predicts current Hubble and deceleration parameters aligning with data.
Abstract
Following the approach of the induced-matter theory, we investigate the cosmological implications of a five-dimensional Brans-Dicke theory, and propose to explain the acceleration of the universe. After inducing in a four-dimensional hypersurface, we classify the energy-momentum tensor into two parts in a way that, one part represents all kind of the matter (the baryonic and dark) and the other one contains every extra terms emerging from the scale factor of the fifth dimension and the scalar field, which we consider as the energy-momentum tensor of dark energy. We also separate the energy-momentum conservation equation into two conservation equations, one for matter and the other for dark energy. We perform this procedure for different cases, without interacting term and with two particular (suitable) interacting terms between the two parts. By assuming the parameter of the state…
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