A new perspective on cosmology through Supernovae Ia and Gamma Ray Bursts
Biagio De Simone, Via Nielson, Enrico Rinaldi, Maria Giovanna Dainotti

TL;DR
This paper discusses the use of Supernovae Ia and Gamma Ray Bursts as cosmological probes to test models, measure parameters like the Hubble constant, and address current tensions in cosmology, emphasizing future standardization efforts.
Contribution
It introduces a new perspective on using SNe Ia and GRBs, especially those associated with Supernovae Ib/c, to improve cosmological measurements and reduce the Hubble constant tension.
Findings
GRBs can be observed up to redshift 9.4, surpassing quasars.
Standardization of GRBs through luminosity-time correlations is promising.
Increasing observed SNe Ia and GRBs can help resolve the Hubble tension.
Abstract
The actual knowledge of the structure and future evolution of our universe is based on the use of cosmological models, which can be tested through the so-called 'probes', namely astrophysical phenomena, objects or structures with peculiar properties that can help to discriminate among different cosmological models. Among all the existing probes, of particular importance are the Supernovae Ia (SNe Ia) and the Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs): the former are considered among the best standard candles so far discovered but suffer from the fact that can be observed until redshift , while the latter are promising standardizable candles which have been observed up to , surpassing even the farthest quasar known to date, which is at . The standard candles can be used to test the cosmological models and to give the expected values of cosmological parameters, in particular the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
