DESIgning concordant distances in the age of precision cosmology: the impact of density fluctuations
David Camarena, Kylar Greene, John Houghteling, Francis-Yan Cyr-Racine

TL;DR
This paper investigates potential deviations from the FLRW metric suggested by BAO, supernova, and CMB data, proposing inhomogeneous models that could explain observed distance discrepancies without dark energy.
Contribution
It introduces an inhomogeneous extension of the ΛCDM model that accounts for anisotropic expansion, challenging the assumption of perfect homogeneity and isotropy in cosmology.
Findings
BAO distances hint at anisotropic expansion.
Inhomogeneous models fit data as well as dark energy scenarios.
Deviations from FLRW are statistically significant, especially with DESY5 data.
Abstract
Discrepancies between distance measurements and CDM predictions reveal notable features in the distance-redshift relation, possibly suggesting the presence of an evolving dark energy component. Given the central role of the Friedmann-Lema\^itre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) metric in modeling cosmological distances, we investigate here whether these features instead point to a possible departure from the fundamental FLRW symmetries. Exploiting the transverse and line-of-sight distances provided by baryonic acoustic oscillations (BAO) observations, we demonstrate that observed distances hint at a slight but systematic preference for an anisotropic expansion rate emerging regardless of the dark energy model considered. Leveraging this non-FLRW feature, we investigate an inhomogeneous extension of the CDM model that naturally provides an anisotropic expansion rate. Our analysis…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
