Measuring the expansion history of the Universe with cosmic chronometers
Michele Moresco

TL;DR
This paper discusses the cosmic chronometers method for measuring the Universe's expansion history, highlighting recent results, systematic considerations, and future prospects for high-precision cosmological constraints.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive overview of the cosmic chronometers technique, including methodology, recent measurements, systematics, and future improvements for cosmological parameter estimation.
Findings
Current measurements constrain H(z) with 5-20% accuracy.
Systematic uncertainties are carefully analyzed and mitigated.
Future surveys could achieve 1% precision in Hubble constant measurement.
Abstract
As revealed by Hubble in 1928, our Universe is expanding. This discovery was fundamental to widening our horizons and our conception of space, and since then determining the rate at which our Universe is expanding has become one of the crucial measurements in cosmology. At the beginning of this century, these measurements revealed the unexpected behavior that this expansion is accelerating and allowed us to have a first glimpse of the dark components that constitute 95\% of our Universe. Cosmic chronometers represent a novel technique to obtain a cosmology-independent determination of the expansion of the Universe, based on the differential age dating of a population of very massive and passively evolving galaxies. Currently, with this new cosmological probe it is possible to constrain the Hubble parameter with an accuracy of around 5\% at up to 10-20\% at . In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Computational Physics and Python Applications
