Can Conformally Coupled Modified Gravity Solve The Hubble Tension?
Tal Adi, Ely D. Kovetz

TL;DR
This paper investigates a conformally-coupled modified gravity model as a potential solution to the Hubble tension, analyzing its effects on cosmological parameters using diverse datasets and assessing its distinguishability with future experiments.
Contribution
The study introduces and constrains a CCMG model with one free parameter, demonstrating its slight ability to relax the Hubble tension and evaluating its observational distinguishability.
Findings
CCMG model slightly relaxes the Hubble tension to H0 = 69.6 ± 1.6 km/s/Mpc
Current data shows no strong preference for CCMG over ΛCDM
Future CMB-S4 data can distinguish CCMG from other models
Abstract
The discrepancy between early-Universe inferences and direct measurements of the Hubble constant, known as the Hubble tension, recently became a pressing subject in high precision cosmology. As a result, a large variety of theoretical models have been proposed to relieve this tension. In this work we analyze a conformally-coupled modified gravity (CCMG) model of an evolving gravitational constant due to the coupling of a scalar field to the Ricci scalar, which becomes active around matter-radiation equality, as required for solutions to the Hubble tension based on increasing the sound horizon at recombination. The model is theoretically advantageous as it has only one free parameter in addition to the baseline CDM ones. Inspired by similar recent analyses of so-called early-dark-energy models, we constrain the CCMG model using a combination of early and late-Universe…
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