Test of the cosmic distance duality relation for arbitrary spatial curvature
Jin Qin, Fulvio Melia, Tong-Jie Zhang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new model-independent method to test the cosmic distance duality relation using strong gravitational lensing and high-redshift quasar data, accounting for arbitrary spatial curvature.
Contribution
It proposes a novel approach to test the CDDR without assuming zero spatial curvature, using multiple parametrizations and lens models, and finds results consistent with a flat universe.
Findings
CDDR is consistent with a flat universe within current uncertainties.
Deviations from flatness beyond Planck's estimate are in tension with the CDDR.
Future data may refine these results and improve constraints.
Abstract
The cosmic distance duality relation (CDDR), eta(z)=(1+z)^2 d_A(z)/d_L(z)=1, is one of the most fundamental and crucial formulae in cosmology. This relation couples the luminosity and angular diameter distances, two of the most often used measures of structure in the Universe. We here propose a new model-independent method to test this relation, using strong gravitational lensing (SGL) and the high-redshift quasar Hubble diagram reconstructed with a Bezier parametric fit. We carry out this test without pre-assuming a zero spatial curvature, adopting instead the value Omega_K=0.001 +/- 0.002 optimized by Planck in order to improve the reliability of our result. We parametrize the CDDR using eta(z)=1 + eta_0 z, 1 + eta_1 z + eta_2 z^2 and 1 + eta_3 z/(1+z), and consider both the SIS and non-SIS lens models for the strong lensing. Our best fit results are: eta_0=-0.021^{+0.068}_{-0.048},…
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