Distinguishing screening mechanisms with environment-dependent velocity statistics
Magnus Fagernes Ivarsen, Philip Bull, Claudio Llinares, David F. Mota

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that environment-dependent velocity statistics, especially the relative radial velocity dispersion, can reveal screening mechanisms in modified gravity theories, providing a new observational test for beyond-GR physics.
Contribution
The study introduces an environment-binned velocity statistic method to detect screening transitions in modified gravity models using N-body simulations.
Findings
Ambient density effectively distinguishes screening behavior.
Strong environment-dependent velocity signatures found in symmetron models.
No transition observed in f(R) models due to deep unscreened regime.
Abstract
Alternative theories of gravity typically invoke an environment-dependent screening mechanism to allow phenomenologically interesting deviations from general relativity (GR) to manifest on larger scales, while reducing to GR on small scales. The observation of the transition from screened to unscreened behavior would be compelling evidence for beyond-GR physics. We show that pairwise peculiar velocity statistics, in particular the relative radial velocity dispersion, , can be used to observe this transition when they are binned by some measure of halo environment. We established this by measuring the radial velocity dispersion between pairs of halos in N-body simulations for three gravity and four symmetron models. We developed an estimator involving only line-of-sight velocities to show that this quantity is observable, and binned the results in halo mass,…
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