Cosmology with gamma-ray bursts: I. The Hubble diagram through the calibrated $E_{\rm p,i}$ - $E_{\rm iso}$ correlation
Marek Demianski, Ester Piedipalumbo, Disha Sawant, Lorenzo Amati

TL;DR
This paper calibrates gamma-ray burst correlations using supernova data to construct a GRB-based Hubble diagram, enabling high-redshift cosmological studies and testing dark energy models.
Contribution
It introduces a calibration of the $E_{p, i}$-$E_{iso}$ correlation with supernova data and applies it to analyze dark energy evolution at high redshifts.
Findings
GRB correlation shows no significant redshift dependence.
GRBs can probe cosmology at $z \\geq 3$, beyond SNIa and BAO.
Marginal evidence for evolving dark energy EOS at 1\\sigma.
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts are the most energetic explosions in the Universe. They are detectable up to very high redshifts, therefore can be used to study the expansion rate of the Universe and to investigate the observational properties of dark energy, provided that empirical correlations between spectral and intensity properties are appropriately calibrated. We used the type Ia supernova luminosity distances to calibrate the correlation between the peak photon energy, , and the isotropic equivalent radiated energy, in GRBs. With this correlation, we tested the reliability of applying GRBs to measure cosmological parameters and to obtain indications on the basic properties and evolution of dark energy. Using 162 GRBs with measured redshifts and spectra, we applied a local regression technique to calibrate the - correlation against the type Ia SN data to…
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