Using quasar and gamma-ray burst measurements to constrain cosmological dark energy models
Narayan Khadka

TL;DR
This paper uses quasar and gamma-ray burst data to explore and constrain dark energy models across a broad redshift range, extending beyond traditional probes, and assesses the standardizability of these high-redshift observations.
Contribution
It introduces methods to standardize high-redshift quasar and gamma-ray burst data for cosmological constraints, expanding the redshift range for testing dark energy models.
Findings
Lower redshift quasar data are standardizable and useful for cosmology.
Gamma-ray burst constraints are weaker but consistent with other probes.
Reverberation-mapped quasars provide additional high-redshift data for dark energy studies.
Abstract
Observational evidence for the accelerated expansion of the universe requires dark energy for its explanation if general relativity is an accurate model of gravity. However, dark energy is a mysterious quantity and we do not know much about its nature so understanding dark energy is an exciting scientific challenge. Cosmological dark energy models are fairly well tested in the low and high redshift parts of the universe. The highest of the low redshift, , region is probed by baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) measurements and the only high redshift probe is the cosmic microwave background anisotropy which probes the part of redshift space. In the intermediate redshift range there are only a handful of observational probes and cosmological models are poorly tested in this region. In this thesis we constrain three pairs of general relativistic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
