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Constraining the runaway dilaton and quintessential dark energy

Dark Energy is some of the weirdest and most mysterious stuff in the universe that tends to increase the rate of expansion of the universe. Two commonly known forms of dark energy are the cosmological constant, a constant energy density filling space homogeneously, and scalar fields such as quintessence or moduli whose energy density can vary with time. We explore one particular model for dynamic dark energy; quintessence driven by a scalar dilaton field. We propose an ansatz for the form of the dilaton field, $|ϕ(a)|/m_P \equiv α_1 \ln t+ α_2 t^n=α\ln a+ β\, a^{2ζ}$, where $a$ is the scale factor and $α$ and $ζ$ are parameters of the model. This phenomenological ansatz for $ϕ$ can be motivated by generic solutions of a scalar dilaton field in many effective string theory and string-inspired gravity models in four dimensions. Using a compilation of current data including type Ia supernovae, we impose observational constraints on the slope parameters like $α$ and $ζ$ and then discuss the relation of our results to analytical constrains on various cosmological parameters, including the dark energy equation of state. Sensible constraints are imposed on model parameters like $α$ and $ζ$ as well as on the dark energy/dark matter couplings using results from structure formation. The constraints of this model are shown to encompass the cosmological constant limit within $1σ$ error bars.

preprint2010arXivOpen access
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