Observational constraints on Hubble constant and deceleration parameter in power-law cosmology
Suresh Kumar

TL;DR
This paper constrains the Hubble constant and deceleration parameter in power-law cosmology using recent observational data, showing it can describe cosmic acceleration but has limitations when tested against primordial nucleosynthesis constraints.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on power-law cosmology parameters from $H(z)$ and SNe Ia data, and compares these with primordial nucleosynthesis limits.
Findings
Constraints from $H(z)$ data: $q=-0.18$, $H_0=68.43$ km/s/Mpc
Constraints from SNe Ia data: $q=-0.38$, $H_0=69.18$ km/s/Mpc
Power-law cosmology fits $H(z)$ and SNe Ia data but conflicts with nucleosynthesis constraints.
Abstract
In this paper, we show that the expansion history of the Universe in power-law cosmology essentially depends on two crucial parameters, namely the Hubble constant and deceleration parameter . We find the constraints on these parameters from the latest and SNe Ia data. At 1 level the constraints from data are obtained as and km s Mpc while the constraints from the SNe Ia data read as and km s Mpc. We also perform the joint test using and SNe Ia data, which yields the constraints and km s Mpc. The estimates of are found to be in close agreement with some recent probes carried out in the literature. The analysis reveals that the…
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