Ultralight Scalar Decay and the Hubble Tension
Mark Gonzalez, Mark P. Hertzberg, Fabrizio Rompineve

TL;DR
This paper investigates ultralight scalar fields, especially axions, as a potential solution to the Hubble tension, demonstrating their decay dynamics and fitting their effects to cosmological data, but noting UV physics challenges.
Contribution
It introduces a realistic ultralight scalar decay model that can alleviate the Hubble tension and analyzes its compatibility with cosmological observations and UV physics constraints.
Findings
The model achieves H0 ≈ 69.9 km/s/Mpc, reducing the tension.
Rapid decay requires large couplings, e.g., Λ ≲ f/80 for axion models.
The model fits data better than ΛCDM with Δχ² ≈ -9.
Abstract
We examine whether the Hubble tension, the mismatch between early and late measurements of , can be alleviated by ultralight scalar fields in the early universe, and we assess its plausibility within UV physics. Since their energy density needs to rapidly redshift away, we explore decays to massless fields around the era of matter-radiation equality. We highlight a concrete implementation of ultralight pseudo-scalars, axions, that decay to an abelian dark sector. This scenario circumvents major problems of other popular realizations of early universe scalar models in that it uses a regular scalar potential that is quadratic around the minimum, instead of the extreme fine-tuning of many existing models. The idea is that the scalar is initially frozen in its potential until , then efficient energy transfer from the scalar to the massless field can occur shortly after the…
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