Low-redshift measurement of the sound horizon through gravitational
time-delays
N. Arendse, A. Agnello, and R. Wojtak. (2019)cite arxiv:1905.12000Comment: A&A subm. 28/05/2019, 6 pages, 3 figures.
Abstract
The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) yields an inference on the matter sound
horizon, within the Standard Model. Independent, direct measurements of the
sound horizon are then a probe of possible deviations from the Standard Model.
We aim at measuring the sound horizon $r_s$ from low-redshift indicators,
completely independent from CMB inference. We use the measured product
$H(z)r_s$ from Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO), plus Supernovae~Ia
to constrain $H(z)/H_0$ and time-delay lenses analysed by the H0LiCOW
collaboration to anchor cosmological distances ($H_0^-1$).
Additionally, we investigate the influence of adding a sample of
higher-redshift quasars with standardisable UV-Xray luminosity distances. We
adopt polynomial expansions in $H(z)$ or in comoving distances, so that our
inference is completely independent of any underlying cosmological model. Our
measurements are independent of Cepheids and systematics from peculiar motions,
to within percent-level accuracy. The inferred sound horizon $r_s$ varies
between $(133 8)$~Mpc and $(138 5)$~Mpc across different models. The
discrepancy with CMB measurements is robust against model choice. Statistical
uncertainties are comparable to systematics. The combination of time-delay
lenses, supernovae and BAO yields a cosmology-independent (and
Cepheid-calibration-independent) distance ladder, and a CMB-independent
measurement of $r_s.$ These cosmographic measurements are then a competitive
test of the Standard Model, regardless of hypotheses on the underlying
cosmology.
Description
Low-redshift measurement of the sound horizon through gravitational time-delays
%0 Generic
%1 arendse2019lowredshift
%A Arendse, Nikki
%A Agnello, Adriano
%A Wojtak, Radosłav
%D 2019
%K tifr
%T Low-redshift measurement of the sound horizon through gravitational
time-delays
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/1905.12000
%X The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) yields an inference on the matter sound
horizon, within the Standard Model. Independent, direct measurements of the
sound horizon are then a probe of possible deviations from the Standard Model.
We aim at measuring the sound horizon $r_s$ from low-redshift indicators,
completely independent from CMB inference. We use the measured product
$H(z)r_s$ from Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO), plus Supernovae~Ia
to constrain $H(z)/H_0$ and time-delay lenses analysed by the H0LiCOW
collaboration to anchor cosmological distances ($H_0^-1$).
Additionally, we investigate the influence of adding a sample of
higher-redshift quasars with standardisable UV-Xray luminosity distances. We
adopt polynomial expansions in $H(z)$ or in comoving distances, so that our
inference is completely independent of any underlying cosmological model. Our
measurements are independent of Cepheids and systematics from peculiar motions,
to within percent-level accuracy. The inferred sound horizon $r_s$ varies
between $(133 8)$~Mpc and $(138 5)$~Mpc across different models. The
discrepancy with CMB measurements is robust against model choice. Statistical
uncertainties are comparable to systematics. The combination of time-delay
lenses, supernovae and BAO yields a cosmology-independent (and
Cepheid-calibration-independent) distance ladder, and a CMB-independent
measurement of $r_s.$ These cosmographic measurements are then a competitive
test of the Standard Model, regardless of hypotheses on the underlying
cosmology.
@misc{arendse2019lowredshift,
abstract = {The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) yields an inference on the matter sound
horizon, within the Standard Model. Independent, direct measurements of the
sound horizon are then a probe of possible deviations from the Standard Model.
We aim at measuring the sound horizon $r_s$ from low-redshift indicators,
completely independent from CMB inference. We use the measured product
$H(z)r_s$ from Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO), plus Supernovae~\textsc{I}a
to constrain $H(z)/H_{0}$ and time-delay lenses analysed by the H0LiCOW
collaboration to anchor cosmological distances ($\propto H_{0}^{-1}$).
Additionally, we investigate the influence of adding a sample of
higher-redshift quasars with standardisable UV-Xray luminosity distances. We
adopt polynomial expansions in $H(z)$ or in comoving distances, so that our
inference is completely independent of any underlying cosmological model. Our
measurements are independent of Cepheids and systematics from peculiar motions,
to within percent-level accuracy. The inferred sound horizon $r_s$ varies
between $(133 \pm 8)$~Mpc and $(138 \pm 5)$~Mpc across different models. The
discrepancy with CMB measurements is robust against model choice. Statistical
uncertainties are comparable to systematics. The combination of time-delay
lenses, supernovae and BAO yields a cosmology-independent (and
Cepheid-calibration-independent) distance ladder, and a CMB-independent
measurement of $r_s.$ These cosmographic measurements are then a competitive
test of the Standard Model, regardless of hypotheses on the underlying
cosmology.},
added-at = {2019-05-30T07:34:21.000+0200},
author = {Arendse, Nikki and Agnello, Adriano and Wojtak, Radosłav},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b59f569d4280f629cf8ef747003319ac/citekhatri},
description = {Low-redshift measurement of the sound horizon through gravitational time-delays},
interhash = {f5dc7af3a61ee83987d8e77449f25971},
intrahash = {b59f569d4280f629cf8ef747003319ac},
keywords = {tifr},
note = {cite arxiv:1905.12000Comment: A&A subm. 28/05/2019, 6 pages, 3 figures},
timestamp = {2019-05-30T07:34:21.000+0200},
title = {Low-redshift measurement of the sound horizon through gravitational
time-delays},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1905.12000},
year = 2019
}