Geometrical tests of cosmological models. III. The cosmology-evolution diagram at z=1
C. Marinoni, A. Saintonge, T. Contini, C.J. Walcher, R. Giovanelli,, M.P. Haynes, K.L. Masters O. Ilbert, A. Iovino, V. Le Brun, O. Le Fevre, A., Mazure, L. Tresse, J.-M. Virey, S. Bardelli, D. Bottini, B. Garilli, G., Guzzo, D. Maccagni, J.P. Picat, R. Scaramella, M. Scodeggio

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy rotational velocities at z=1 to create a cosmology-evolution diagram, constraining cosmological models and galaxy evolution by combining angular diameter-redshift and Hubble diagram analyses.
Contribution
It introduces the cosmology-evolution diagram, linking cosmological parameters with galaxy structural evolution using combined observational tests.
Findings
Flat matter-dominated cosmology (Omega_m=1) is excluded at 2sigma.
Open cosmology with low matter density and no dark energy is excluded at >1sigma.
The method constrains galaxy evolution and cosmology simultaneously.
Abstract
The rotational velocity of distant galaxies, when interpreted as a size (luminosity) indicator, may be used as a tool to select high redshift standard rods (candles) and probe world models and galaxy evolution via the classical angular diameter-redshift or Hubble diagram tests. We implement the proposed testing strategy using a sample of 30 rotators spanning the redshift range 0.2<z<1 with high resolution spectra and images obtained by the VIMOS/VLT Deep Redshift Survey (VVDS) and the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODs). We show that by applying at the same time the angular diameter-redshift and Hubble diagrams to the same sample of objects (i.e. velocity selected galactic discs) one can derive a characteristic chart, the cosmology-evolution diagram, mapping the relation between global cosmological parameters and local structural parameters of discs such as size and…
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