Screened Axio-dilaton Cosmology: Novel Forms of Early Dark Energy
Abstract
We study the cosmology of multi-field Dark Energy, using a well-motivated
axio-dilaton model that contains the minimal number of fields to have the
2-derivative sigma-model interactions that power-counting arguments show
naturally compete with General Relativity at low energies. Our analysis differs
from earlier, related, studies by treating the case where the dilaton's
couplings to matter are large enough to require screening to avoid unacceptable
dilaton-mediated forces in the solar system. We use a recently proposed
screening mechanism that exploits the interplay between
stronger-than-gravitational axion-matter couplings with the 2-derivative
axion-dilaton interactions to suppress the couplings of the dilaton to bulk
matter. The required axion-matter couplings also modify cosmology, with the
axion's background energy density turning out to resemble early dark energy. We
compute the properties of the axion fluid describing the rapid oscillations of
the axion field around the time-dependent minimum of its matter-dependent
effective potential, extending the usual formalism to include nontrivial
kinetic sigma-model interactions. We explore the implications of these models
for the Cosmic Microwave Background and the growth of structure and find that
for dilaton potentials of the Albrecht-Skordis form (itself well-motivated by
UV physics), successful screening can be consistent with the early dark energy
temporarily comprising as much as 10% of the total density in the past. We find
that increasing the dilaton-matter coupling decreases the growth of structure
due to enhanced Hubble friction, an effect that dominates the usual fifth-force
effects that amplify structure growth.