Doutorado em Astrofísica, Cosmologia e Gravitação
URI Permanente para esta coleção
Nível: Doutorado
Ano de início: 2016
Conceito atual na CAPES: 5
Ato normativo: Parecer 487/2018
Periodicidade de seleção: Semestral
Área(s) de concentração: Astronomia e Física
Url do curso: https://cosmologia.ufes.br/pt-br/pos-graduacao/PPGCosmo/detalhes-do-curso?id=1453
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Navegando Doutorado em Astrofísica, Cosmologia e Gravitação por Autor "Bragança, Vinicius Miranda"
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- ItemModified gravity and large scale structure cosmology: a linear and non-linear treatment(Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, 2022-06-10) Oliveira, Guilherme Brando de; Falciano, Felipe Tovar; https://orcid.org/0000000322631252; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7214193952056222; https://orcid.org/0000000308051905; Fabris, Julio Cesar; https://orcid.org/000000018880107X; http://lattes.cnpq.br/5193649615872035; Bragança, Vinicius Miranda; Quartin, Miguel Boavista; https://orcid.org/0000000158536164; http://lattes.cnpq.br/3080181268936724; Abramo, Luis Raul Weber; Wands, David GrahamThis thesis consists of a comprehensive study of beyond-ΛCDM cosmologies, in particular I investigate possible consequences of scalar-tensor theories of gravity on the Large Scale Structure of the Universe. Within the Standard Model of Cosmology, General Relativity is assumed to be the theory that describes gravity in all scales and this is supported by the highly accurate Astrophysical and Solar System tests. Notwithstanding, at cosmological scales, we still lack gravity tests with the same constraining power. Therefore, in addition to the motivation from the well-known conceptual problems of the Cosmological Constant, it is reasonable to investigate if General Relativity is the correct gravity theory at the largest scales of the Universe. In order to increase the accuracy of our cosmological tests of gravity, I develop numerical tools based on the linear and nonlinear regimes of cosmological perturbation theories, as well as a non-perturbative approach using quasi N-body simulations. I also present different ways of testing the large freedom introduced by modified theories of gravity in the parameter space. Indeed, modified gravity models cannot avoid introducing extra parameters besides the usual six cosmological parameters of the ΛCDM model. The main results of the thesis have been published in four papers cited along the text and I have tried to condensate them mainly in Chapters 3, 4 and 6. In chapter 3 I discuss the impact of modified gravity on cosmological observables such as the modifications Horndeski theories introduce in the growth and light propagation equations of motion. In particular, I perform a detailed analysis of the No Slip Gravity at the linear regime of structure formation. Then, I discuss how early modified gravity theories change the matter power spectrum at large and small scales. In Chapter 4, I start by analyzing the matter power spectrum at linear scales, namely how it is defined within ΛCDM and how massive neutrinos introduce a scale dependent on the growth function. Then, I introduce the formulation of the N-Body gauge, a specific coordinate system that facilitates the interpretation of Newtonian simulations within a relativistic framework, by consistently introducing the effects coming from photons, neutrinos and dark energy. As stage-IV LSS surveys will probe the Universe at increasingly large scales; it is imperative to include these species in our analysis inasmuch at large scales their imprint can be above the 1% threshold. I also present new cosmological tests of gravity by combining this framework with relativistic N-Body simulations. At the end I show how to correctly combine modified gravity effects and Newtonian simulations. In Chapter 5, I outline all the nonlinear mathematical tools have I have studied and developed during this project and on Chapter 6 I present the results of how we can construct computationally fast new numerical tools using all the new developments I have done in modified gravity, from linear to nonlinear scales. Chapter 7 ends the thesis with some conclusions and three future avenues I plan to pursue in the next few years.