Dynamical dark energy versus $\Lambda=$const. in light of observations
Joan Sola Peracaula, Javier de Cruz Perez, Adria Gomez-Valent

TL;DR
This paper analyzes extensive cosmological data and finds statistically significant evidence suggesting that dark energy is mildly evolving over time, challenging the notion of a constant cosmological constant in the universe.
Contribution
It demonstrates that combining diverse observational data sets reveals signs of dynamical dark energy, especially within the running vacuum model, which is not evident in CMB-only studies.
Findings
Approximately 3.3σ evidence for dynamical dark energy using XCDM parameterization.
Up to 3.8σ evidence within the running vacuum model (RVM).
RVM helps address the σ8 tension in cosmology.
Abstract
After about two decades of the first observational papers confirming the accelerated expansion of the universe, we are still facing the question whether the cause of it is a rigid cosmological constant -term or a mildly evolving dynamical dark energy (DDE). While studies focusing mainly on CMB measurements do not perceive signs of physics beyond the CDM, in this work we show that if we take a large string of modern cosmological observations, in which not only the CMB but also a rich sample of large scale structure formation data are included, one can extract signs of DDE using a simple XCDM parameterization. These signs can be enhanced up to near in the context of the running vacuum model (RVM), in which the vacuum energy density is in interaction with dark matter. Recently the RVM has been shown to provide an…
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