Consistency tests of $\Lambda$CDM from the early integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect: Implications for early-time new physics and the Hubble tension
Sunny Vagnozzi

TL;DR
This paper tests the consistency of the Lambda Cold Dark Matter model using the early Integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect in the CMB, finding strong agreement with LambdaCDM and challenging early-time new physics solutions to the Hubble tension.
Contribution
It introduces a new parameter to test the eISW effect in LambdaCDM and demonstrates that current data strongly supports LambdaCDM over models with early-time new physics.
Findings
eISW parameter consistent with LambdaCDM
Early dark energy models struggle to match eISW observations
Models addressing Hubble tension must preserve eISW predictions
Abstract
New physics increasing the expansion rate just prior to recombination is among the least unlikely solutions to the Hubble tension, and would be expected to leave an important signature in the early Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (eISW) effect, a source of Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropies arising from the time-variation of gravitational potentials when the Universe was not completely matter dominated. Why, then, is there no clear evidence for new physics from the CMB alone, and why does the CDM model fit CMB data so well? These questions and the vastness of the Hubble tension theory model space motivate general consistency tests of CDM. I perform an eISW-based consistency test of CDM introducing the parameter , which rescales the eISW contribution to the CMB power spectra. A fit to Planck CMB data yields , in…
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