Skip to main content
← Back to work

Works cited by this work

1719 works

Work: Cosmology and fundamental physics with the Euclid satellite

  1. Effect of inhomogeneities on the expansion rate of the universe

    Edward W. Kolb, S. Matarrese, Alessio Notari +1

    Article20052 citations
    ABI
  2. Scattering of dark matter and dark energy

    Fergus Simpson

    Article20102 citations
    ABI
  3. Bimetric gravity from ghost-free massive gravity

    S. F. Hassan, Rachel A. Rosen

    Article20122 citations
    ABI
  4. New dark matter physics: Clues from halo structure

    Craig J. Hogan, Julianne J. Dalcanton

    Article20002 citations
    ABI
  5. Relation between physical and gravitational geometry

    Jacob D. Bekenstein

    Article19932 citations
    ABI
  6. Observations in Cosmology

    J. Kristian, Rainer K. Sachs

    Article19662 citations
    ABI
  7. Exact spherically-symmetric inhomogeneous model with<i>n</i>perfect fluids

    Valerio Marra, M. Pääkkönen

    Article20122 citations
    ABI
  8. Dynamics of interacting dark energy

    Gabriela Caldera-Cabral, Roy Maartens, L. Arturo Ureña–López

    Article20092 citations
    ABI
  9. The imperfect fluid behind kinetic gravity braiding

    Oriol Pujolàs, Ignacy Sawicki, Alexander Vikman

    Article20112 citations
    ABI
  10. Higgs-dilaton cosmology: From the early to the late Universe

    J. García-Bellido, Javier Rubio, Mikhail Shaposhnikov +1

    Article20112 citations
    ABI
  11. Supersymmetric dark matter

    K. Griest, Marc Kamionkowski

    Article20002 citations
    ABI
  12. Acoustic signatures in the primary microwave background bispectrum

    Eiichiro Komatsu, David N. Spergel

    Article20012 citations
    ABI
  13. A unifying description of dark energy

    Jérôme Gleyzes, David Langlois, Filippo Vernizzi

    Article20142 citations
    ABI
  14. Power Spectrum Tomography with Weak Lensing

    Wayne Hu

    Article19992 citations
    ABI
  15. Baryonic Dark Matter

    B. J. Carr

    Article19942 citations
    ABI