Fluctuating Dark Energy and the Luminosity Distance
C. J. G. Vedder, E. Belgacem, N. E. Chisari, T. Prokopec

TL;DR
This paper investigates how spatial fluctuations in dark energy could influence luminosity distance measurements, potentially detectable through angular correlations in supernova data, offering new insights into dark energy's nature.
Contribution
It introduces a model where dark energy fluctuations affect luminosity distances and proposes observational tests with upcoming surveys like LSST.
Findings
Luminosity distance is affected by dark energy fluctuations.
Angular correlations in luminosity distance can be detected.
LSST could test the fluctuating dark energy model.
Abstract
The origin of dark energy driving the accelerated expansion of the universe is still mysterious. We explore the possibility that dark energy fluctuates, resulting in spatial correlations. Due to these fluctuations, the Hubble rate itself becomes a fluctuating quantity. We discuss the effect this has on measurements of type Ia supernovae, which are used to constrain the luminosity distance. We show that the luminosity distance is affected by spatial correlations in several ways. First, the luminosity distance becomes dressed by the fluctuations, thereby differing from standard CDM. Second, angular correlations become visible in the two-point correlation function of the luminosity distance. To investigate the latter we construct the angular power spectrum of luminosity distance fluctuations. We then perform a forecast for two supernova surveys, the ongoing Dark Energy Survey…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
