f(T) teleparallel gravity and cosmology
Yi-Fu Cai, Salvatore Capozziello, Mariafelicia De Laurentis, Emmanuel, N. Saridakis

TL;DR
This paper reviews f(T) teleparallel gravity, exploring its theoretical foundations, cosmological solutions, observational constraints, and extensions, highlighting its potential to explain late-time acceleration and avoid singularities in the universe.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of f(T) gravity, including its cosmological applications, solutions, observational constraints, and relation to other modified gravity theories.
Findings
f(T) gravity can explain late-time cosmic acceleration.
It allows for non-singular bouncing cosmologies.
Observational data constrains f(T) model parameters.
Abstract
Over the past decades, the role of torsion in gravity has been extensively investigated along the main direction of bringing gravity closer to its gauge formulation and incorporating spin in a geometric description. Here we review various torsional constructions, from teleparallel, to Einstein-Cartan, and metric-affine gauge theories, resulting in extending torsional gravity in the paradigm of f(T) gravity, where f(T) is an arbitrary function of the torsion scalar. Based on this theory, we further review the corresponding cosmological and astrophysical applications. In particular, we study cosmological solutions arising from f(T) gravity, both at the background and perturbation levels, in different eras along the cosmic expansion. The f(T) gravity construction can provide a theoretical interpretation of the late-time universe acceleration, and it can easily accommodate with the regular…
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