ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We investigate the observational viability of a class of interacting dark energy (iDE) models in the light of the latest Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), type Ia supernovae (SNe) and SH0ES Hubble parameter measurements. Our analysis explores the assumption of a non-zero spatial curvature, the correlation between the interaction parameter $alpha$ and the current expansion rate $H_0$, and updates the results reported in cite{micol}. Initially, assuming a spatially flat universe, the results show that the best-fit of our joint analysis clearly favours a positive interaction, i.e., an energy flux from dark matter to dark energy, with $alpha approx 0.2$, while the non-interacting case, $alpha = 0$, is ruled out by more than $3sigma$ confidence level. On the other hand, considering a non-zero spatial curvature, we find a slight preference for a negative value of the curvature parameter, which seems to relax the correlation between the parameters $alpha$ and $H_0$, as well as between $H_0$ and the normalization of the matter power spectrum on scales of 8$h^{-1}$ Mpc ($sigma_8$). Finally, we discuss the influence of considering the SH$0$ES prior on $H_0$ in the joint analyses, and find that such a choice does not change considerably the standard cosmology predictions but has a significant influence on the results of the iDE model.
It is possible that there exist some interactions between dark energy (DE) and dark matter (DM), and a suitable interaction can alleviate the coincidence problem. Several phenomenological interacting forms are proposed and are fitted with observation
The Universe is modeled as consisting of pressureless baryonic matter and a bulk viscous fluid which is supposed to represent a unified description of the dark sector. In the homogeneous and isotropic background the textit{total} energy density of th
We place observational constraints on two models within a class of scenarios featuring an elastic interaction between dark energy and dark matter that only produces momentum exchange up to first order in cosmological perturbations. The first one corr
Since there is no known symmetry in Nature that prevents a non-minimal coupling between the dark energy (DE) and cold dark matter (CDM) components, such a possibility constitutes an alternative to standard cosmology, with its theoretical and observat
We study observational signatures of non-gravitational interactions between the dark components of the cosmic fluid, which can be either due to creation of dark particles from the expanding vacuum or an effect of the clustering of a dynamical dark en