David Rapetti, Chris Blake, Steven W. Allen, Adam Mantz, David Parkinson, Florian Beutler
Combining galaxy cluster data from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey and the Chandra X-ray Observatory, cosmic microwave background data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, and galaxy clustering data from the WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey, the 6-degree Field Galaxy Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III, we test for consistency the cosmic growth of structure predicted by General Relativity (GR) and the cosmic expansion history predicted by the cosmological constant plus cold dark matter paradigm (LCDM). The combination of these three independent, well studied measurements of the evolution of the mean energy density and its fluctuations is able to break strong degeneracies between model parameters. We model the key properties of cosmic growth with the normalization of the matter power spectrum, sigma_8, and the cosmic growth index, gamma, and those of cosmic expansion with the mean matter density, Omega_m, the Hubble constant, H_0, and a kinematical parameter equivalent to that for the dark energy equation of state, w. To further tighten constraints on the expansion parameters, we also include supernova, baryon acoustic oscillation and Cepheid variable data. For a spatially flat geometry, w=-1, and allowing for systematic uncertainties, we obtain sigma_8=0.787+-0.019 and gamma=0.576+0.058-0.059 (at the 68.3 per cent confidence level). Allowing w to vary, we find Omega_m=0.256+-0.011, H_0=71.5+-1.3 km s^-1 Mpc^-1 and w=-0.968+-0.049 for the expansion parameters, and sigma_8=0.783+0.020-0.019 and gamma=0.546+0.071-0.072 for the growth parameters. These results are in excellent agreement with GR+LCDM (gamma~0.55; w=-1) and represent the tightest and most robust simultaneous constraint on cosmic growth and expansion to date.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1205.4679
No comments:
Post a Comment