232 research outputs found
Examining the cosmic acceleration with the latest Union2 supernova data
In this Letter, by reconstructing the diagnostic and the deceleration
parameter from the latest Union2 Type Ia supernova sample with and without
the systematic error along with the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) and the
cosmic microwave background (CMB), we study the cosmic expanding history, using
the Chevallier-Polarski-Linder (CPL) parametrization. We obtain that Union2+BAO
favor an expansion with a decreasing of the acceleration at . However,
once the CMB data is added in the analysis, the cosmic acceleration is found to
be still increasing, indicating a tension between low redshift data and high
redshift one. In order to reduce this tension significantly, two different
methods are considered and thus two different subsamples of Union2 are
selected. We then find that two different subsamples+BAO+CMB give completely
different results on the cosmic expanding history when the systematic error is
ignored, with one suggesting a decreasing cosmic acceleration, the other just
the opposite, although both of them alone with BAO support that the cosmic
acceleration is slowing down. However, once the systematic error is considered,
two different subsamples of Union2 along with BAO and CMB all favor an
increasing of the present cosmic acceleration. Therefore a clear-cut answer on
whether the cosmic acceleration is slowing down calls for more consistent data
and more reliable methods to analyze them.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures; PLB in pres
Determining using a model-independent method
By using type Ia supernovae (SNIa) to provide the luminosity distance (LD)
directly, which depends on the value of the Hubble constant , and the angular diameter distance from galaxy
clusters or baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs) to give the derived LD
according to the distance duality relation, we propose a model-independent
method to determine from the fact that different observations should give
the same LD at a given redshift. Combining the Sloan Digital Sky Survey II
(SDSS-II) SNIa from the MLCS2k2 light curve fit and galaxy cluster data, we
find that at the confidence level (CL), for the
sample of the elliptical model for galaxy clusters, and
for that of the spherical model. The former is
smaller than the values from other observations, whereas the latter is
consistent with the Planck result at the CL and agrees very well with
the value reconstructed directly from the data. With the SDSS-II SNIa
and BAO measurements, a tighter constraint, , is obtained.
For comparison, we also consider the Union 2.1 SNIa from the SALT2 light curve
fitting. The results from the Union 2.1 SNIa are slightly larger than those
from the SDSS-II SNIa, and the Union 2.1 SNIa + BAOs give the tightest value.
We find that the values from SNIa + BAOs are quite consistent with those from
the Planck and the BAOs, as well as the local measurement from Cepheids and
very-low-redshift SNIa.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Testing cosmic opacity from SNe Ia and Hubble parameter through three cosmological-model-independent methods
We use the newly published 28 observational Hubble parameter data ()
and current largest SNe Ia samples (Union2.1) to test whether the universe is
transparent. Three cosmological-model-independent methods (nearby SNe Ia
method, interpolation method and smoothing method) are proposed through
comparing opacity-free distance modulus from Hubble parameter data and
opacity-dependent distance modulus from SNe Ia . Two parameterizations,
and are adopted for the
optical depth associated to the cosmic absorption. We find that the results are
not sensitive to the methods and parameterizations. Our results support a
transparent universe.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, PLB(in press
Strongly lensed repeating Fast Radio Bursts as precision probes of the universe
Fast Radio bursts (FRBs), bright transients with millisecond durations at
GHz and typical redshifts probably , are likely to be
gravitationally lensed by intervening galaxies. Since the time delay between
images of strongly lensed FRB can be measured to extremely high precision
because of the large ratio between the typical galaxy-lensing delay
time (10 days) and the width of bursts (ms),
we propose strongly lensed FRBs as precision probes of the universe. We show
that, within the flat CDM model, the Hubble constant can be
constrained with a uncertainty from 10 such systems probably
observed with the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) in 30 years. More
importantly, the cosmic curvature can be model-independently constrained to a
precision of . This constraint can directly test the validity of the
cosmological principle and break the intractable degeneracy between the cosmic
curvature and dark energy.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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