Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2021-03-09 11:30 to 2021-03-12 12:30 | Next meeting is Friday May 23rd, 11:30 am.
A plethora of observational data obtained over the last couple of decades has allowed cosmology to enter into a precision era and has led to the foundation of the standard cosmological constant and cold dark matter paradigm, known as the $\Lambda$CDM model. Given the many possible extensions of this concordance model, we present here several novel consistency tests which could be used to probe for deviations from $\Lambda$CDM. First, we derive a joint consistency test for the spatial curvature $\Omega_{k,0}$ and the matter density $\Omega_\textrm{m,0}$ parameters, constructed using only the Hubble rate $H(z)$, which can be determined directly from observations. Secondly, we present a new test of possible deviations from homogeneity using the combination of two datasets, either the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) and $H(z)$ data or the transversal and radial BAO data, while we also introduce two consistency tests for $\Lambda$CDM which could be reconstructed via the transversal and radial BAO data. We then reconstruct the aforementioned tests using the currently available data in a model independent manner using a particular machine learning approach, namely the Genetic Algorithms. Finally, we also report on a $\sim 4\sigma$ tension on the transition redshift as determined by the $H(z)$ and radial BAO data.
Positivity bounds - constraints on any low-energy effective field theory imposed by the fundamental axioms of unitarity, causality and locality in the UV - have recently been used to constrain scalar-tensor theories of dark energy. However, the coupling to matter fields has so far played a limited role. We show that demanding positivity when including interactions with standard matter fields leads to further constraints on the dark energy parameter space. We demonstrate how implementing these bounds as theoretical priors affects cosmological parameter constraints and explicitly illustrate the impact on a specific Effective Field Theory for dark energy. We also show in this model that the existence of a standard UV completion requires that gravitational waves must travel superluminally on cosmological backgrounds.