Clustering dark energy and halo abundances
Ronaldo C. Batista, Valerio Marra

TL;DR
This paper investigates how allowing dark energy to cluster affects galaxy cluster abundance predictions, revealing significant modifications that could reconcile observational discrepancies in cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces novel corrections to the halo mass function for clustering dark energy with a redshift-dependent equation of state, extending previous models.
Findings
Clustering dark energy impacts halo abundances by 10-30%.
Cluster counts at redshift one are modified by approximately 30%.
Standard methods need adaptation to account for dark energy clustering.
Abstract
Within the standard paradigm, dark energy is taken as a homogeneous fluid that drives the accelerated expansion of the universe and does not contribute to the mass of collapsed objects such as galaxies and galaxy clusters. The abundance of galaxy clusters -- measured through a variety of channels -- has been extensively used to constrain the normalization of the power spectrum: it is an important probe as it allows us to test if the standard CDM model can indeed accurately describe the evolution of structures across billions of years. It is then quite significant that the Planck satellite has detected, via the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, less clusters than expected according to the primary CMB anisotropies. One of the simplest generalizations that could reconcile these observations is to consider models in which dark energy is allowed to cluster, i.e., allowing its sound speed…
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