Abstract
Current constraints on f(R) gravity from the large-scale structure are
at the verge of penetrating into a region where the modified forces
become nonlinearly suppressed. For a consistent treatment of observables
at these scales, we study cluster quantities produced in chameleon and
linearized Hu-Sawicki f(R) gravity dark matter N-body simulations. We
find that the standard Navarro-Frenk-White halo density profile and the
radial power law for the pseudo-phase-space density provide equally good
fits for f(R) clusters as they do in the Newtonian scenario. We give
qualitative arguments for why this should be the case. For practical
applications, we derive analytic relations, e.g., for the f(R) scalar
field, the gravitational potential, and the velocity dispersion as seen
within the virialized clusters. These functions are based on three
degrees of freedom fitted to simulations, i.e., the characteristic
density, scale, and velocity dispersion. We further analyze predictions
for these fitting parameters from the gravitational collapse and the
Jeans equation, which are found to agree well with the simulations. Our
analytic results can be used to consistently constrain chameleon f(R)
gravity with future observations on virialized cluster scales without
the necessity of running a large number of simulations.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 124054 |
Journal | Physical Review D, particles, fields, gravitation, and cosmology |
Volume | 85 |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jun 2012 |
Keywords
- Modified theories of gravity
- Cosmology