No Arabic abstract
Many physical theories beyond the Standard Model predict time variations of basic physics parameters. Direct measurement of the time variations of these parameters is very difficult or impossible to achieve. By contrast, measurements of fundamental constants are relatively easy to achieve, both in the laboratory and by astronomical spectra of atoms and molecules in the early universe. In this work measurements of the proton to electron mass ratio $mu$ and the fine structure constant $alpha$ are combined to place mildly model dependent limits on the fractional variation of the Quantum Chromodynamic Scale and the sum of the fractional variations of the Higgs Vacuum Expectation Value and the Yukawa couplings on time scales of more than half the age of the universe. The addition of another model parameter allows the fractional variation of the Higgs VEV and the Yukawa couplings to be computed separately. Limits on their variation are found at the level of less than $5 times 10^{-5}$ over the past seven gigayears. A model dependent relation between the expected fractional variation of $alpha$ relative to $mu$ tightens the limits to $10^{-7}$ over the same time span. Limits on the present day rate of change of the constants and parameters are then calculated using slow roll quintessence. A primary result of this work is that studies of the dimensionless fundamental constants such as $alpha$ and $mu$, whose values depend on the values of the physics parameters, are excellent monitors of the limits on the time variation of these parameters.
A novel fractal structure for the cosmological horizon, inspired by COVID-19 geometry, which results in a modified area entropy, is applied to cosmology in order to serve dark energy. The constraints based on a complete set of observational data are derived. There is a strong Bayesian evidence in favor of such a dark energy in comparison to a standard $Lambda$CDM model and that this energy cannot be reduced to a cosmological constant. Besides, there is a shift towards smaller values of baryon density parameter and towards larger values of the Hubble parameter, which reduces the Hubble tension.
The Horndeski gauge-gravity coupling is the leading non-minimal interaction between gravity and gauge bosons, and it preserves all the symmetries and the number of physical degrees of freedom of the standard model of particle physics and general relativity. In this paper we study the effects of the non-minimal interaction in astronomy and cosmology, and obtain upper bounds on the associated dimensionless coupling constant $lambda$. From the modification of equations of motion of gauge bosons applied to compact astronomical objects, we find upper bounds $|lambda| lesssim 10^{88}$, $|lambda| lesssim 10^{75}$ and $|lambda| lesssim 10^{84}$ from a black hole shadow, neutron stars and white dwarfs, respectively. The bound $|lambda| lesssim 10^{75}$ that is deduced from neutron stars is the strongest and provides twenty orders of magnitude improvement of the previously known best bound on this parameter. On the other hand, the effects of this term on modification of the gravitational Poisson equation lead to a weaker bound $|lambda| lesssim 10^{98}$. From the propagation of gravitational waves we also find $|lambda| lesssim 10^{119}$, which is even weaker.
We study the cosmological constant ($Lambda$) in the standard $Lambda$CDM model by introducing the textit{graduated dark energy} (gDE) characterised by a minimal dynamical deviation from the null inertial mass density of the $Lambda$ in the form $rho_{rm inert}propto rho^{lambda}<0$ with $lambda<1$ being a ratio of two odd integers, for which its energy density $rho$ dynamically takes negative values in the finite past. For large negative values of $lambda$, it creates a phenomenological model described by a smooth function that approximately describes the $Lambda$ spontaneously switching sign in the late universe to become positive today. We confront the model with the latest combined observational data sets of PLK+BAO+SN+$H$. It is striking that the data predict bimodal posterior probability distributions for the parameters of the model along with large negative $lambda$ values; the new maximum significantly excludes the $Lambda$, and the old maximum contains the $Lambda$. The improvement in the goodness of fit for the $Lambda$ reaches highly significant levels, $Deltachi_{rm min}^2=6.4$ for the new maxima, while it remains at insignificant levels, $Deltachi_{rm min}^2lesssim0.02$, for the old maxima. We show that, in contrast to the old maxima, which do not distinguish from the $Lambda$, the new maxima agree with the model-independent $H_0$ measurements, high-precision Ly-$alpha$ data, and model-independent $Omh^2$ diagnostic estimates. Our results provide strong hints of a spontaneous sign switch in the cosmological constant and lead us to conjecture that the universe has transitioned from AdS vacua to dS vacua, at a redshift $zapprox 2.32$ and triggered the late-time acceleration, and suggests looking for such mechanisms in string theory constructions.
Cosmological constraints on the scalar-tensor theory of gravity by analyzing the angular power spectrum data of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) obtained from the Planck 2015 results are presented. We consider the harmonic attractor model, in which the scalar field has a harmonic potential with curvature ($beta$) in the Einstein frame and the theory relaxes toward the Einstein gravity with time. Analyzing the {it TT}, {it EE}, {it TE} and lensing CMB data from Planck by the Markov chain Monte Carlo method, we find that the present-day deviation from the Einstein gravity (${alpha_0}^2$) is constrained as ${alpha_0}^2<2.5times10^{-4-4.5beta^2} (95.45% {rm C.L.})$ and ${alpha_0}^2<6.3times10^{-4-4.5beta^2} (99.99% {rm C.L.})$ for $0<beta<0.4$. The time variation of the effective gravitational constant between the recombination and the present epochs is constrained as $G_{rm rec}/G_0<1.0056 (95.45% {rm C.L.})$ and $G_{rm rec}/G_0<1.0115 (99.99 %{rm C.L.})$. We also find that the constraints are little affected by extending to nonflat cosmological models because the diffusion damping effect revealed by Planck breaks the degeneracy of the projection effect.
We present cosmological constraints on the scalar-tensor theory of gravity by analyzing the angular power spectrum data of the cosmic microwave background obtained from the Planck 2015 results together with the baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) data. We find that the inclusion of the BAO data improves the constraints on the time variation of the effective gravitational constant by more than $10%$, that is, the time variation of the effective gravitational constant between the recombination and the present epochs is constrained as $G_{rm rec}/G_0-1 <1.9times 10^{-3} (95.45% {rm C.L.})$ and $G_{rm rec}/G_0-1 <5.5times 10^{-3} (99.99 % {rm C.L.})$. We also discuss the dependence of the constraints on the choice of the prior.