# Probing beyond-Horndeski gravity on ultra-large scales

**Authors:** Didam Duniya (Cape Town, Western Cape, AIMS), Teboho Moloi (Cape, Town), Chris Clarkson (QMUL, Western Cape, Cape Town), Julien Larena (Cape, Town), Roy Maartens (Western Cape, Portsmouth), Bishop Mongwane (Cape, Town), Amanda Weltman (Cape Town)

arXiv: 1902.09919 · 2020-01-15

## TL;DR

This paper explores the implications of beyond-Horndeski gravity, reformulated as Unified Dark Energy, on large-scale cosmological observations, highlighting how relativistic effects and model parameters influence the galaxy power spectrum.

## Contribution

It provides a detailed analysis of how beyond-Horndeski gravity affects ultra-large scale structure and relativistic effects, emphasizing the importance of multi-tracer approaches for detection.

## Key findings

- Effective mass smaller than Planck mass suffices for observational consistency.
- UDE sound horizon influences relativistic effects and power spectrum.
- Doppler effect remains significant across all epochs.

## Abstract

The beyond-Horndeski gravity has recently been reformulated in the dark energy paradigm - which has been dubbed, Unified Dark Energy (UDE). The evolution equations for the given UDE appear to correspond to a non-conservative dark energy scenario, in which the total energy-momentum tensor is not conserved. We investigate both the background cosmology and, the large-scale imprint of the UDE by probing the angular power spectrum of galaxy number counts, on ultra-large scales; taking care to include the full relativistic corrections in the observed overdensity. The background evolution shows that only an effective mass smaller than the Planck mass is needed in the early universe in order for predictions in the given theory to match current observational constraints. We found that the effective mass-evolution-rate parameter, which drives the evolution of the UDE, acts to enhance the observed power spectrum and, hence, relativistic effects (on ultra-large scales) by enlarging the UDE sound horizon. Conversely, both the (beyond) Horndeski parameter and the kineticity act to diminish the observed power spectrum, by decreasing the UDE sound horizon. Our results show that, in a universe with UDE, a multi-tracer analysis will be needed to detect the relativistic effects in the large-scale structure. In the light of a multi-tracer analysis, the various relativistic effects hold the potential to distinguish different gravity models. Moreover, while the Doppler effect will remain significant at all epochs and, thus can not be ignored, the integrated Sachs-Wolfe, the time-delay and the potential (difference) effects, respectively, will only become significant at epochs near z=3 and beyond, and may be neglected at late epochs. In the same vein, the Doppler effect alone can serve as an effective cosmological probe for the large-scale structure or gravity models, in the angular power spectrum - at all z.

## Full text

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## Figures

19 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.09919/full.md

## References

60 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.09919/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.09919