Observational constraints on viscous cosmology in $f(T,L_m)$ gravity
M. Koussour, Alnadhief H. A. Alfedeel, S. Muminov, and J. Rayimbaev

TL;DR
This study explores how viscous $f(T,L_m)$ gravity can explain late-time cosmic acceleration without a cosmological constant, using observational data to constrain model parameters and analyze the universe's expansion behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a viscous $f(T,L_m)$ gravity model with a linear form and constrains it with recent cosmological observations, highlighting the role of viscosity in cosmic acceleration.
Findings
Model parameters are consistent with observations.
The universe shows current acceleration with a transition from matter-like to quintessence behavior.
Viscous $f(T,L_m)$ gravity remains a viable alternative to $ ext{Lambda}$CDM.
Abstract
We investigate the late-time cosmic acceleration within the framework of viscous gravity, where the gravitational action depends on both the torsion scalar and the matter Lagrangian . In this context, the Universe is modeled as a bulk viscous fluid, allowing for dissipative effects that generate an effective negative pressure capable of driving acceleration without invoking a cosmological constant. We adopt a simple linear model and assume a constant bulk viscosity coefficient . The model parameters are constrained using a joint analysis of recent observational datasets, including 31 Hubble parameter measurements, the Pantheon+ sample of 1701 Type Ia Supernovae, and the latest baryon acoustic oscillation data from DESI, employing a Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) approach. The best-fit results, $H_0 = 68.16 \pm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
