Do gamma-ray burst measurements provide a useful test of cosmological models?
Narayan Khadka, Orlando Luongo, Marco Muccino, Bharat Ratra

TL;DR
This study assesses whether gamma-ray burst measurements can reliably constrain cosmological models, comparing their results with established probes like BAO and H(z), and finds current data are consistent but less constraining.
Contribution
It provides the largest Amati-correlation GRB dataset (A118) and evaluates its effectiveness in constraining cosmological parameters compared to other probes.
Findings
GRB constraints are consistent with BAO and H(z) but weaker.
The A118 dataset has the smallest intrinsic dispersion among examined GRB samples.
Current GRB data are not yet reliable for precise cosmological constraints.
Abstract
We study eight different gamma-ray burst (GRB) data sets to examine whether current GRB measurements -- that probe a largely unexplored part of cosmological redshift () space -- can be used to reliably constrain cosmological model parameters. We use three Amati-correlation samples and five Combo-correlation samples to simultaneously derive correlation and cosmological model parameter constraints. The intrinsic dispersion of each GRB data set is taken as a goodness measurement. We examine the consistency between the cosmological bounds from GRBs with those determined from better-established cosmological probes, such as baryonic acoustic oscillation (BAO) and Hubble parameter measurements. We use the Markov chain Monte Carlo method implemented in \textsc{MontePython} to find best-fit correlation and cosmological parameters, in six different cosmological models, for the eight GRB…
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