Cosmological Implications of Nonminimally-Coupled $f(R)$ Gravity and the Lagrangian of Cosmic Fluids
R. P. L. Azevedo

TL;DR
This paper investigates the importance of correctly identifying the on-shell Lagrangian density of cosmic fluids in nonminimally-coupled $f(R)$ gravity theories, analyzing its impact on cosmological models and deriving observational constraints.
Contribution
It clarifies the form of the Lagrangian density for cosmic fluids in NMC gravity and derives new cosmological constraints based on observational data.
Findings
Correct Lagrangian density for solitonic fluids derived
Thermodynamic behavior of fluids in NMC gravity analyzed
New constraints on NMC gravity models from cosmological data
Abstract
In the standard model of cosmology, the background evolution of the Universe can in general be adequately described by general relativity and a uniform and isotropic metric minimally coupled with a collection of perfect fluids. These fluids are usually described by their energy-momentum tensor, which can be derived from the fluid's Lagrangian density. Under general relativity, the Lagrangian density is only relevant to the extent that it results in the correct energy-momentum tensor for a specific perfect fluid. This is not the case in theories that feature a nonminimal coupling (NMC) between the matter fields and gravity. In such cases, the on-shell Lagrangian density of the matter fields appears explicitly in the equations of motion, in addition to their energy-momentum tensor. The determination of the correct on-shell Lagrangian density for a particular fluid is therefore of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Solar and Space Plasma Dynamics
