Improved constraints on the expansion rate of the Universe up to z~1.1 from the spectroscopic evolution of cosmic chronometers
M. Moresco, A. Cimatti, Raul Jimenez, L. Pozzetti, G. Zamorani, M., Bolzonella, J. Dunlop, F. Lamareille, M. Mignoli, H. Pearce, P. Rosati, D., Stern, L. Verde, E. Zucca, C. M. Carollo, T. Contini, J.-P. Kneib, O. Le, Fevre, S. J. Lilly, V. Mainieri, A. Renzini, M. Scodeggio

TL;DR
This paper improves measurements of the Universe's expansion rate up to redshift 1.1 using spectroscopic data from early-type galaxies, providing new constraints that support accelerated cosmic expansion.
Contribution
It introduces a refined method using cosmic chronometers and the 4000 Å break to measure H(z) with high precision up to z~1.1, including the first constraints at z ≠ 0 with comparable accuracy.
Findings
Eight new H(z) measurements with 5-12% precision
Evidence supporting accelerated expansion of the Universe
Potential to extend measurements up to z~2 with future surveys
Abstract
We present new improved constraints on the Hubble parameter H(z) in the redshift range 0.15 < z < 1.1, obtained from the differential spectroscopic evolution of early-type galaxies as a function of redshift. We extract a large sample of early-type galaxies (\sim11000) from several spectroscopic surveys, spanning almost 8 billion years of cosmic lookback time (0.15 < z < 1.42). We select the most massive, red elliptical galaxies, passively evolving and without signature of ongoing star formation. Those galaxies can be used as standard cosmic chronometers, as firstly proposed by Jimenez & Loeb (2002), whose differential age evolution as a function of cosmic time directly probes H(z). We analyze the 4000 {\AA} break (D4000) as a function of redshift, use stellar population synthesis models to theoretically calibrate the dependence of the differential age evolution on the differential…
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