Difficulties in reconciling non-negligible differences between the local and cosmological values of the gravitational coupling in extended Brans-Dicke theories
Adri\`a G\'omez-Valent, Prajwal Hassan Puttasiddappa

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether extended Brans-Dicke theories can reconcile differences between local and cosmological measurements of gravitational coupling, finding that screening mechanisms only produce minimal effects, limiting their potential to resolve cosmological tensions.
Contribution
The study explores extensions of Brans-Dicke cosmology that aim to screen modifications locally while maintaining cosmological effects, revealing limitations in their ability to significantly alter the gravitational coupling.
Findings
Screening mechanisms produce only tiny deviations in gravitational coupling.
Extended models struggle to reconcile local and cosmological gravitational measurements.
Limitations may hinder these models' effectiveness in addressing cosmological tensions.
Abstract
Recent studies by Sol\`a Peracaula, G\'omez-Valent, de Cruz P\'erez and Moreno-Pulido (2019,2020) have pointed out the intriguing possibility that Brans-Dicke cosmology with constant vacuum energy density (BD-CDM) may be able to alleviate the and tensions that are found in the framework of the concordance cosmological model (GR-CDM). The fitting analyses presented in these works indicate a preference for values of the effective gravitational coupling appearing in the Friedmann equation, , about larger than Newton's constant (as measured on Earth), and mildy evolving with the expansion of the universe. The signal reaches the c.l. when the prior on from SH0ES and the angular diameter distances to strong gravitationally lensed quasars measured by H0LICOW are considered, and the c.l. when only the former is…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
