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Olga Mena

Researcher at University of Valencia

Publications -  232
Citations -  17677

Olga Mena is an academic researcher from University of Valencia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutrino & Dark matter. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 203 publications receiving 13524 citations. Previous affiliations of Olga Mena include Autonomous University of Madrid & Spanish National Research Council.

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Nonstandard neutrino cosmology dilutes the lensing anomaly

TL;DR: The role of neutrinos in this anomaly has been mostly overlooked, despite their key role in CMB lensing, because in the standard scenario they tend to increase the tension as mentioned in this paper .
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On the most constraining cosmological neutrino mass bounds

TL;DR: In this paper, the neutrino mass limits were obtained by making use of the Cosmic Microwave Background temperature fluctuation and polarization measurements, Supernovae Ia luminosity distances, Baryon Acoustic Oscillation observations and determinations of the growth rate parameter.
Peer Review

On the dynamics of a dark sector coupling

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors present a compendium of the current cosmological constraints on a large variety of interacting models, investigating scenarios where the coupling parameter of the interaction function and the dark energy equation of state can be either constant or dynamical.
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Variations in fundamental constants at the cosmic dawn

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that large variations in these fundamental constants would produce features on the 21cm power spectrum that may be distinguishable from astrophysical uncertainties, and they forecast the sensitivity for the Square Kilometer Array, and show that the 21 cm power spectrum may be able to constrain variations at the level of ${\cal O}(10^{-3})$.
Journal ArticleDOI

A consistent view of interacting dark energy from multiple CMB probes

TL;DR: In this article , a cosmological model featuring an interaction between dark energy and dark matter was analyzed in light of the measurements of the Cosmic Microwave Background released by three independent experiments: the most recent data by the Planck satellite and the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, and WMAP (9-year data).