Constraints on Cosmological Models and Reconstructing the Acceleration History of the Universe with Gamma-Ray Burst Distance Indicators
Nan Liang, Puxun Wu, Shuang Nan Zhang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new cosmology-independent calibration method for gamma-ray burst distance indicators, combines GRB data with other observations to constrain models, and reconstructs the universe's acceleration history, suggesting possible deviations from the standard model.
Contribution
A novel calibration approach for GRB distance indicators that avoids circularity and integrates GRB data into comprehensive cosmological constraints.
Findings
The $ mf extit extLambda$CDM model is consistent with combined data within 1-$ mf extsigma$.
GRB data slightly tighten the confidence regions for cosmological parameters.
Reconstructed acceleration history indicates potential deviations from $ mf extLambda$CDM, hinting at oscillatory cosmology models.
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been regarded as standard candles at very high redshift for cosmology research. We have proposed a new method to calibrate GRB distance indicators with Type Ia supernova (SNe Ia) data in a completely cosmology-independent way to avoid the circularity problem that had limited the direct use of GRBs to probe cosmology [N. Liang, W. K. Xiao, Y. Liu, and S. N. Zhang, Astrophys. J. 685, 354 (2008).]. In this paper, a simple method is provided to combine GRB data into the joint observational data analysis to constrain cosmological models; in this method those SNe Ia data points used for calibrating the GRB data are not used to avoid any correlation between them. We find that the CDM model is consistent with the joint data in the 1- confidence region, using the GRB data at high redshift calibrated with the interpolating method, the Constitution set…
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