Testing General Relativity on cosmological scales at redshift z ~ 1.5 with quasar and CMB lensing
Yucheng Zhang, Anthony R. Pullen, Shadab Alam, Sukhdeep Singh, Etienne, Burtin, Chia-Hsun Chuang, Jiamin Hou, Brad W. Lyke, Adam D. Myers, Richard, Neveux, Ashley J. Ross, Graziano Rossi, Cheng Zhao

TL;DR
This study measures the gravity probe $E_G$ at redshift 1.5 using quasar and CMB lensing data, finding results consistent with general relativity and demonstrating the potential for future constraints on modified gravity models.
Contribution
First high-redshift, large-scale measurement of $E_G$ using quasar and CMB lensing cross-correlation, confirming GR predictions and improving the methodology for testing gravity.
Findings
$E_G$ measured at $z \,\sim 1.5$ agrees with GR within $1\sigma$
Detected $C_\ell^{\kappa q}$ signal at $12\sigma$ significance
Best-fit $E_G$ value of $0.30\pm 0.05$ aligns with GR prediction of $0.33$
Abstract
We test general relativity (GR) at the effective redshift by estimating the statistic , a probe of gravity, on cosmological scales . This is the highest-redshift and largest-scale estimation of so far. We use the quasar sample with redshifts from Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS) Data Release 16 (DR16) as the large-scale structure (LSS) tracer, for which the angular power spectrum and the redshift-space distortion (RSD) parameter are estimated. By cross correlating with the 2018 cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing map, we detect the angular cross-power spectrum signal at significance. Both jackknife resampling and simulations are used to estimate the covariance matrix (CM) of at…
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