Constraining Weyl type f(Q,T) gravity with Big Bang Nucleosynthesis

Abstract

The Weyl type f(Q,T) modified gravity theory is an extension of the f(Q) and f(Q,T) type theories, where T is the trace of the matter energy-momentum tensor, and the scalar non-metricity Q is represented in its standard Weyl form, and it is fully determined by a vector field ω μ. The theory can give a good description of the observational data, and of the evolution of the late-time Universe, including a geometric explanation of the dark energy. In this work we investigate the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) constraints on several Weyl type f(Q,T) gravity models. In particular, we consider the corrections that Weyl type f(Q,T) terms induce on the freeze-out temperature Tf, as compared to the standard results. We analyze in detail three distinct cosmological models, corresponding to specific choices of the functional form of f(Q,T). The first model has a simple linear additive structure in Q and T, the second model is multiplicative in Q and T, while the third is additive in T and the exponential of Q. For each f(Q,T) we consider first the cosmological evolution in the radiation dominated era, and then we impose the observational bound on |δ Tf/ Tf| to obtain constraints on the model parameters from the primordial abundances of the light elements such as helium-4, deuterium and lithium-7. The abundances of helium-4 and deuterium agree with theoretical predictions, however, the lithium problem, even slightly alleviated, still persists for the considered Weyl type f(Q,T) models. Generally, these models satisfy the BBN constraints, and thus they represent viable cosmologies describing the entire dynamical time scale of the evolution of the Universe.

0

Turn this paper into a full lesson

ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…