145565 - Cosmological signatures of torsion and how to distinguish torsion from the dark sector.pdf (427.96 kB)
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journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 01:09 authored by Krzysztof BolejkoKrzysztof Bolejko, Cinus, M, Roukema, BFTorsion is a non-Riemannian geometrical extension of general relativity that allows including the spin of matter and the twisting of spacetime. Cosmological models with torsion have been considered in the literature to solve problems of either the very early (high redshift 𝓏) or the present-day Universe. This paper focuses on distinguishable observational signatures of torsion that could not be otherwise explained with a scalar field in pseudo-Riemannian geometry. We show that when torsion is present, the cosmic duality relation between the angular diameter distance, DA, and the luminosity distance, DL, is broken. We show how the deviation described by the parameter η = DL/[DA(1 + 𝓏)2] - 1 is linked to torsion and how different forms of torsion lead to special-case parametrizations of η, including η0𝓏, η0𝓏/(1 + 𝓏), and η0ln(1 + 𝓏). We also show that the effects of torsion could be visible in low-redshift data, inducing biases in supernovae-based H0 measurements. We also show that torsion can impact the Clarkson-Bassett-Lu (CBL) function C(𝓏) = 1 + H2(DD" - D'2) + HH′DD′, where D is the transverse comoving distance. If D is inferred from the luminosity distance, then, in general, nonzero torsion models, C(𝓏) ≠ 0. For pseudo-Riemannian geometry, the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker metric has C(𝓏) ≡ 0; thus, the measurement of the Clarkson-Bassett-Lu function could provide another diagnostic of torsion.
Funding
Australian Research Council
History
Publication title
Physical Review DVolume
101Issue
10Article number
104046Number
104046Pagination
1-12ISSN
2470-0010Department/School
School of Natural SciencesPublisher
American Physical SocietyPlace of publication
United StatesRights statement
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