CAN SOLAR SYSTEM OBSERVATIONS TELL US SOMETHING ABOUT THE COSMOLOGICAL CONSTANT?
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Publication:5481890
DOI10.1142/S021827180600819XzbMath1125.83316arXivgr-qc/0511137OpenAlexW3104614728MaRDI QIDQ5481890
Publication date: 24 August 2006
Published in: International Journal of Modern Physics D (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0511137
Related Items (7)
Linearized modified gravity theories with a cosmological term: advance of perihelion and deflection of light ⋮ Lambda perturbations of Keplerian orbits in the expanding universe ⋮ Astronomical constraints on some long-range models of modified gravity ⋮ Pioneer 10 and 11 Spacecraft Anomalous Acceleration in the light of the Nonsymmetric Kaluza-Klein (Jordan-Thiry) Theory ⋮ Two-body problem in presence of cosmological constant ⋮ Solar system's bounds on the extra acceleration of \(f(R,T)\) gravity revisited ⋮ Influence of cosmological expansion in local experiments
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