%0 Journal Article %T Cosmological perturbations and structure formation in nonlocal infrared modifications of general relativity %A Yves Dirian %A Stefano Foffa %A Nima Khosravi %A Martin Kunz %A Michele Maggiore %J Physics %D 2014 %I arXiv %R 10.1103/PhysRevD.90.023005 %X We study the cosmological consequences of a recently proposed nonlocal modification of general relativity, obtained by adding a term $m^2R\,\Box^{-2}R$ to the Einstein-Hilbert action. The model has the same number of parameters as $\Lambda$CDM, with $m$ replacing $\Omega_{\Lambda}$, and is very predictive. At the background level, after fixing $m$ so as to reproduce the observed value of $\Omega_M$, we get a pure prediction for the equation of state of dark energy as a function of redshift, $w_{\rm DE}(z)$, with $w_{\rm DE}(0)$ in the range $[-1.165,-1.135]$ as $\Omega_M$ varies over the broad range $\Omega_M\in [0.20,0.36]$. We find that the cosmological perturbations are well-behaved, and the model fully fixes the dark energy perturbations as a function of redshift $z$ and wavenumber $k$. The nonlocal model provides a good fit to supernova data and predicts deviations from General Relativity in structure formation and in weak lensing at the level of 3-4%, therefore consistent with existing data but readily detectable by future surveys. For the logarithmic growth factor we obtain $\gamma\simeq 0.53$, to be compared with $\gamma\simeq 0.55$ in $\Lambda$CDM. For the Newtonian potential on subhorizon scales our results are well fitted by $\Psi(a;k)=[1+\mu_s a^s]\Psi_{\rm GR}(a;k)$ with a scale-independent $\mu_s\simeq 0.09$ and $s\simeq 2$, while the anisotropic stress is negligibly small. %U http://arxiv.org/abs/1403.6068v1