Constraining the time evolution of dark energy, curvature and neutrino properties with cosmic chronometers
Michele Moresco, Raul Jimenez, Licia Verde, Andrea Cimatti, Lucia, Pozzetti, Claudia Maraston, Daniel Thomas

TL;DR
This paper uses cosmic chronometers combined with other cosmological data to tightly constrain dark energy, curvature, and neutrino properties, providing insights into the Universe's expansion history and ruling out some models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of cosmic chronometers in constraining cosmological parameters independently and in combination with other probes, especially for dark energy evolution and neutrino properties.
Findings
Dark energy equation of state parameters are tightly constrained.
Neutrino effective number excludes extra sterile neutrinos at over 5σ.
Curvature is consistent with a flat universe within uncertainties.
Abstract
We use the latest compilation of observational H(z) measurements obtained with cosmic chronometers in the redshift range to place constraints on cosmological parameters. We consider the sample alone and in combination with other state-of-the art cosmological probes: CMB data from the latest Planck 2015 release, the most recent estimate of the Hubble constant , a compilation of recent BAO data, and the latest SNe sample. Since cosmic chronometers are independent of the assumed cosmological model, we are able to provide constraints on the parameters that govern the expansion history of the Universe in a way that can be used to test cosmological models. We show that the H(z) measurements obtained with cosmic chronometer from the BOSS survey provide enough constraining power in combination with CMB data to constrain the time evolution of dark energy, yielding constraints…
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