Chameleon Screening Depends on the Shape and Structure of NFW Halos
Andrius Tamosiunas, Chad Briddon, Clare Burrage, Weiguang Cui, Adam, Moss

TL;DR
This study uses finite element methods to analyze how the shape and structure of NFW halos influence chameleon screening effects, revealing that current observational constraints imply negligible effects on galaxy clusters.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical analysis of chameleon screening in triaxial NFW halos, linking halo parameters to screening effectiveness.
Findings
Maximum chameleon-to-NFW acceleration ratio is ~10^{-7} at virial radius.
Triaxiality causes directional effects on acceleration measurements.
No measurable effects on galaxy cluster scales under current constraints.
Abstract
Chameleon gravity is an example of a model that gives rise to interesting phenomenology on cosmological scales while simultaneously possessing a screening mechanism, allowing it to avoid solar system constraints. Such models result in non-linear field equations, which can be solved analytically only in simple highly symmetric systems. In this work we study the equation of motion of a scalar-tensor theory with chameleon screening using the finite element method. More specifically, we solve the field equation for spherical and triaxial NFW cluster-sized halos. This allows a detailed investigation of the relationship between the NFW concentration and the virial mass parameters and the magnitude of the chameleon acceleration, as measured at the virial radius. In addition, we investigate the effects on the chameleon acceleration due to halo triaxiality. We focus on the parameter space…
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