Nonlocal gravity. Conceptual aspects and cosmological predictions
Enis Belgacem, Yves Dirian, Stefano Foffa, Michele Maggiore

TL;DR
This paper explores nonlocal modifications of gravity, particularly the RR model, which can produce accelerated cosmic expansion without a cosmological constant and fit observational data as well as standard models.
Contribution
It systematically analyzes the conceptual aspects of nonlocal gravity and identifies the RR model as a viable cosmological model consistent with observations.
Findings
The RR model acts as an effective dark energy with a phantom equation of state.
Cosmological perturbations in the RR model are well-behaved.
The RR model fits CMB, BAO, SNe, and structure formation data as well as mbda CDM.
Abstract
Even if the fundamental action of gravity is local, the corresponding quantum effective action, that includes the effect of quantum fluctuations, is a nonlocal object. These nonlocalities are well understood in the ultraviolet regime but much less in the infrared, where they could in principle give rise to important cosmological effects. Here we systematize and extend previous work of our group, in which it is assumed that a mass scale is dynamically generated in the infrared, giving rise to nonlocal terms in the quantum effective action of gravity. We give a detailed discussion of conceptual aspects related to nonlocal gravity and of the cosmological consequences of these models. The requirement of providing a viable cosmological evolution severely restricts the form of the nonlocal terms, and selects a model (the so-called RR model) that corresponds to a dynamical mass…
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