Dark matter and dark energy are usually assumed to couple only gravitationally. An extension to this picture is to model dark energy as a scalar field coupled directly to cold dark matter. This coupling leads to new physical effects, such as a fifth force and a time-dependent dark matter particle mass. In this work we examine the impact that coupling has on weak lensing statistics by constructing realistic simulated weak lensing maps using ray-tracing techniques through N-body cosmological simulations.We construct maps for different lensing quantities, covering a range of scales from a few arcminutes to several degrees. The concordance cold dark matter (CDM) model is compared to different coupled dark energy models, described either by an exponential scalar field potential (standard coupled dark energy scenario) or by a SUGRA potential (bouncing model). We analyse several statistical quantities and our results, with sources at low redshifts are largely consistent with previous work on cosmic microwave background lensing by Carbone et al. The most significant differences from the CDM model are due to the enhanced growth of the perturbations and to the effective friction term in nonlinear dynamics. For the most extreme models, we see differences in the power spectra up to 40 per cent compared to the CDM model. The different time evolution of the linear matter overdensity can account for most of the differences, but when controlling for this using a CDM model having the same normalization, the overall signal is smaller due to the effect of the friction term appearing in the equation of motion for dark matter particles.

Ray-tracing simulations of coupled dark energy models

Pace F.
First
;
2015-01-01

Abstract

Dark matter and dark energy are usually assumed to couple only gravitationally. An extension to this picture is to model dark energy as a scalar field coupled directly to cold dark matter. This coupling leads to new physical effects, such as a fifth force and a time-dependent dark matter particle mass. In this work we examine the impact that coupling has on weak lensing statistics by constructing realistic simulated weak lensing maps using ray-tracing techniques through N-body cosmological simulations.We construct maps for different lensing quantities, covering a range of scales from a few arcminutes to several degrees. The concordance cold dark matter (CDM) model is compared to different coupled dark energy models, described either by an exponential scalar field potential (standard coupled dark energy scenario) or by a SUGRA potential (bouncing model). We analyse several statistical quantities and our results, with sources at low redshifts are largely consistent with previous work on cosmic microwave background lensing by Carbone et al. The most significant differences from the CDM model are due to the enhanced growth of the perturbations and to the effective friction term in nonlinear dynamics. For the most extreme models, we see differences in the power spectra up to 40 per cent compared to the CDM model. The different time evolution of the linear matter overdensity can account for most of the differences, but when controlling for this using a CDM model having the same normalization, the overall signal is smaller due to the effect of the friction term appearing in the equation of motion for dark matter particles.
2015
447
1
858
874
Cosmological parameters; Cosmology: theory; Dark energy; Gravitational lensing: weak; Large-scale structure of universe; Methods: numerical
Pace F.; Baldi M.; Moscardini L.; Bacon D.; Crittenden R.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
MNRAS_2015_447_858.pdf

Accesso aperto

Tipo di file: PDF EDITORIALE
Dimensione 2.84 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.84 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1842126
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 18
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 17
social impact