Signatures of Very Early Dark Energy in the Matter Power Spectrum
Alexander C. Sobotka, Adrienne L. Erickcek, Tristan L. Smith

TL;DR
This paper investigates how very Early Dark Energy, caused by scalar fields active between big bang nucleosynthesis and matter-radiation equality, leaves distinctive signatures in the matter power spectrum, affecting structure formation.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of very Early Dark Energy and analyzes its unique signatures in the matter power spectrum, constrained by multiple cosmological observations.
Findings
vEDE can produce a bump in the matter power spectrum at small scales.
Power suppression occurs on intermediate scales due to vEDE effects.
Observations allow vEDE scenarios that significantly alter small-scale power.
Abstract
Axion-like scalar fields can induce temporary deviations from the standard expansion history of the universe. The scalar field's contribution to the energy density of the universe grows while the field is held constant by Hubble friction, but when the scalar field starts to evolve, its energy density decreases faster than the radiation density for some potentials. We explore the observational signatures of such a scalar field that becomes dynamical between big bang nucleosynthesis and matter-radiation equality, which we call very Early Dark Energy (vEDE). If vEDE momentarily dominates the energy density of the universe, it generates a distinctive feature in the matter power spectrum that includes a bump on scales that enter the horizon just after the scalar field starts to evolve. For , the amplitude of this bump can exceed the amplitude of the standard…
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