Constraining modified gravity scenarios with the 6dFGS and SDSS galaxy peculiar velocity datasets
Stuart Lyall, Chris Blake, Ryan J. Turner

TL;DR
This paper uses galaxy peculiar velocity data from 6dFGS and SDSS to test and constrain modified gravity models, finding results consistent with General Relativity and setting limits on alternative theories.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on modified gravity scenarios using galaxy peculiar velocities, demonstrating the method's effectiveness and future potential with larger surveys.
Findings
Results are consistent with General Relativity.
Constraints on nDGP and f(R) gravity parameters.
Method shows promise for future large-scale surveys.
Abstract
The detailed nature of dark energy remains a mystery, leaving the possibility that its effects might be explained by changes to the laws of gravity on large scales. The peculiar velocities of galaxies directly trace the strength of gravity on cosmic scales and provide a means to further constrain such models. We generate constraints on different scenarios of gravitational physics by measuring peculiar velocity and galaxy clustering two-point correlations, using redshifts and distances from the 6-degree Field Galaxy Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Peculiar Velocity samples, and fitting them against models characteristic of different cosmologies. Our best-fitting results are all found to be in statistical agreement with General Relativity, in which context we measure the low-redshift growth of structure to be , consistent with the prediction of…
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