Observational Probes of Cosmic Acceleration
David H. Weinberg (OSU), Michael J. Mortonson (OSU/Berkeley), Daniel, J. Eisenstein (Arizona/Harvard), Christopher Hirata (Caltech/OSU), Adam G., Riess (JHU), Eduardo Rozo (Chicago/SLAC)

TL;DR
This paper reviews observational methods for measuring cosmic acceleration, focusing on systematic uncertainties, forecasts for dark energy constraints, and the importance of combining multiple techniques for robust results.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of four key observational methods and forecasts their potential to constrain dark energy and modified gravity with upcoming large-scale surveys.
Findings
Systematic uncertainties are critical in precision measurements.
Combining multiple methods improves robustness and constraint accuracy.
Stage IV experiments can significantly tighten dark energy parameter constraints.
Abstract
The accelerating expansion of the universe is the most surprising cosmological discovery in many decades, implying that the universe is dominated by some form of "dark energy" with exotic physical properties, or that Einstein's theory of gravity breaks down on cosmological scales. The profound implications of cosmic acceleration have inspired ambitious experimental efforts to measure the history of expansion and growth of structure with percent-level precision or higher. We review in detail the four most well established methods for making such measurements: Type Ia supernovae, baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), weak gravitational lensing, and galaxy clusters. We pay particular attention to the systematic uncertainties in these techniques and to strategies for controlling them at the level needed to exploit "Stage IV" dark energy facilities such as BigBOSS, LSST, Euclid, and WFIRST. We…
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