A 6% measurement of the Hubble parameter at $z\sim0.45$: direct evidence of the epoch of cosmic re-acceleration
Michele Moresco, Lucia Pozzetti, Andrea Cimatti, Raul Jimenez, Claudia, Maraston, Licia Verde, Daniel Thomas, Annalisa Citro, Rita Tojeiro, David, Wilkinson

TL;DR
This paper presents a new, precise, model-independent measurement of the Hubble parameter at redshift 0.45, providing strong evidence for the epoch of cosmic re-acceleration and the transition from decelerated to accelerated expansion.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, cosmology-independent method using cosmic chronometers with BOSS data to measure H(z), achieving high accuracy and confirming the transition epoch at high significance.
Findings
Measured H(z=0.4293) with 6% accuracy.
First cosmology-independent detection of the transition redshift.
Strongly disfavored no-transition hypothesis at 99.9% confidence.
Abstract
Deriving the expansion history of the Universe is a major goal of modern cosmology. To date, the most accurate measurements have been obtained with Type Ia Supernovae and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations, providing evidence for the existence of a transition epoch at which the expansion rate changes from decelerated to accelerated. However, these results have been obtained within the framework of specific cosmological models that must be implicitly or explicitly assumed in the measurement. It is therefore crucial to obtain measurements of the accelerated expansion of the Universe independently of assumptions on cosmological models. Here we exploit the unprecedented statistics provided by the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Data Release 9 to provide new constraints on the Hubble parameter using the em cosmic chronometers approach. We extract a sample of more than 130000…
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