Disentangling cosmic distance tensions with early and late dark energy
Tanisha Jhaveri, Tanvi Karwal, Thomas Crawford, Wayne Hu, Ali Rida Khalife, Lennart Balkenhol, Fei Ge

TL;DR
This paper explores how early and late dark energy components can independently and jointly alleviate tensions in cosmological data, notably reducing the Hubble constant discrepancy without invoking phantom models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that separating early and late dark energy effects can resolve multiple cosmological tensions more stably than traditional parameterizations.
Findings
EDE reduces CMB-BAO tension by changing sound horizon calibration.
Combining EDE with thawing quintessence further reduces dataset tensions.
EDE lowers Hubble tension from 7σ to 2-3σ, improving consistency.
Abstract
Recent cosmological data reveal tension between parameters inferred from measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB), baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), and supernovae (SN) under CDM. Typical dynamical dark energy parameterizations (such as ) that seek to jointly resolve these tensions have an equation of state parameter that crosses into the phantom regime, leading to potential instabilities for physical models. We show that the BAO (early-time) and SN (late-time) sides of the tension can instead be treated independently. Early dark energy (EDE) can reduce the tension between CMB-BAO data by changing the calibration of the sound horizon at the drag epoch , with a relative to CDM, raising to 70.87 . EDE alone cannot bring consistency between CMB, BAO, and SN data, but combining with a…
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