The Maximum Angular-Diameter Distance in Cosmology
Fulvio Melia, Manoj K. Yennapureddy

TL;DR
This paper measures the maximum angular-diameter distance in the universe using quasar data, providing a new way to distinguish between cosmological models and supporting the R_h=ct universe as the most probable model.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method to estimate z_max from quasar cores and demonstrates its effectiveness in discriminating cosmological models, favoring R_h=ct.
Findings
z_max measured at 1.70 ± 0.20
R_h=ct model has ~92.8% probability of correctness
Both R_h=ct and LCDM fit angular-size data well
Abstract
Unlike other observational signatures in cosmology, the angular-diameter distance d_A(z) uniquely reaches a maximum (at z_max) and then shrinks to zero towards the big bang. The location of this turning point depends sensitively on the model, but has been difficult to measure. In this paper, we estimate and use z_max inferred from quasar cores: (1) by employing a sample of 140 objects yielding a much reduced dispersion due to pre-constrained limits on their spectral index and luminosity, (2) by reconstructing d_A(z) using Gaussian processes, and (3) comparing the predictions of seven different cosmologies and showing that the measured value of z_max can effectively discriminate between them. We find that z_max=1.70 +\- 0.20---an important new probe of the Universe's geometry. The most strongly favoured model is R_h=ct, followed by Planck LCDM. Several others, including Milne,…
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