Is cosmic acceleration slowing down?
Arman Shafieloo, Varun Sahni, Alexei A. Starobinsky

TL;DR
This paper examines recent cosmic expansion data suggesting that cosmic acceleration may have peaked and is slowing down, with evidence pointing towards evolving dark energy possibly decaying into dark matter.
Contribution
It provides evidence that cosmic acceleration may be slowing and introduces a toy model for decaying dark energy consistent with observational data.
Findings
Cosmic acceleration may have peaked and is decreasing.
A coasting universe model fits the data as well as LCDM.
Evolving dark energy could be decaying into dark matter.
Abstract
We investigate the course of cosmic expansion in its `recent past' using the Constitution SN Ia sample (which includes CfA data at low redshifts), jointly with signatures of baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) in the galaxy distribution and fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB). Earlier SN Ia data sets could not address this issue because of a paucity of data at low redshifts. Allowing the equation of state of dark energy (DE) to vary, we find that a coasting model of the universe (q_0=0) fits the data about as well as LCDM. This effect, which is most clearly seen using the recently introduced `Om' diagnostic, corresponds to an increase of Om(z) and q(z) at redshifts z \lleq 0.3. In geometrical terms, this suggests that cosmic acceleration may have already peaked and that we are currently witnessing its slowing down. The case for evolving DE strengthens if a subsample of…
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