Cosmic transparency: A test with the baryon acoustic feature and type Ia supernovae
Surhud More, Jo Bovy, David W. Hogg

TL;DR
This paper tests the fundamental Etherington relation using baryon acoustic features and type Ia supernovae to constrain cosmic transparency and photon interactions, providing model-independent limits on intergalactic dust and dark sector interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, model-independent method combining BAO and supernovae data to test cosmic transparency and limits photon interactions with dark sector or dust.
Findings
Current optical depth change limited to Δτ < 0.13 at 95% confidence.
Constraints on scatterer density and cross-section: nσ < 2×10^{-4} h Mpc^{-1}.
Future data could improve limits to nσ < 1.1×10^{-5} h Mpc^{-1}.
Abstract
Conservation of the phase-space density of photons plus Lorentz invariance requires that the cosmological luminosity distance be larger than the angular diameter distance by a factor of , where is the redshift. Because this is a fundamental symmetry, this prediction--known sometimes as the "Etherington relation" or the "Tolman test"--is independent of world model, or even the assumptions of homogeneity and isotropy. It depends, however, on Lorentz invariance and transparency. Transparency can be affected by intergalactic dust or interactions between photons and the dark sector. Baryon acoustic feature and type Ia supernovae measures of the expansion history are differently sensitive to the angular diameter and luminosity distances and can therefore be used in conjunction to limit cosmic transparency. At the present day, the comparison only limits the change in…
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