Testing the mapping between redshift and cosmic scale factor
Rados{\l}aw Wojtak, Francisco Prada

TL;DR
This paper tests the fundamental redshift-scale factor relation in cosmology by allowing for a generalized mapping and analyzing current BAO and SN data, revealing degeneracies with dark energy and limitations in constraining it.
Contribution
It introduces a framework to test the redshift-scale factor relation by jointly constraining cosmological parameters and a generalized redshift mapping using observational data.
Findings
Generalized redshift mapping is degenerate with dark energy.
Current data cannot constrain dark energy without high-redshift Ly-alpha measurements.
Marginalization over f(z) alters the matter-dark energy degeneracy.
Abstract
The canonical redshift-scale factor relation, 1/a=1+z, is a key element in the standard LambdaCDM model of the big bang cosmology. Despite its fundamental role, this relation has not yet undergone any observational tests since Lemaitre and Hubble established the expansion of the Universe. It is strictly based on the assumption of the Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker metric describing a locally homogeneous and isotropic universe and that photons move on null geodesics of the metric. Thus any violation of this assumption, within general relativity or modified gravity, can yield a different mapping between the model redshift z=1/a-1 and the actually observed redshift z_obs, i.e. z_obs neq z. Here we perform a simple test of consistency for the standard redshift-scale factor relation by determining simultaneous observational constraints on the concordance LambdaCDM cosmological…
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