The impact of constrained interacting dark energy on the bound-zone velocity profile

Abstract

We numerically study the effects of constrained interacting dark energy (CIDER) on the bound-zone velocity profiles around massive dark matter halos. Analyzing the CIDER simulations performed by Baldi (2023) for three different cases of dark sector coupling (β=0.03, 0.05 and 0.08) as well as for the standard cosmology (β=0), we determine the mean peculiar velocity profiles in the bound zones around the friends-of-friends halos with masses larger than M cut=3× 1013\,h-1M at three redshifts, z=0, 0.5 and 1. It is found that the universal power-law formula proposed by Falco et al. (2024) originally for the case still describes well the bound-zone velocity profiles, V(r), even in the CIDER models. The slope of V(r), turns out to be significantly affected by the CIDER, progressively decreasing as β increases. Meanwhile, the amplitude of V(r) exhibits little dependence on β, which is ascribed to the identical Hubble parameters shared by the and CIDER models in the entire redshift range. Our results imply that the bound-zone velocity slope can break a degeneracy even between the and CIDER models with β 0.03, which the standard cosmological diagnostics fail to distinguish. We devise a simple analytic formula for the bound-zone slope as a function of β, and prove its validity at all of the three redshifts. It is concluded that the slope of the mean bound-zone peculiar velocity profile should be in principle a powerful probe of dark sector interaction.

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