Bibcode
Zhao, G.-Bo; Raveri, Marco; Pogosian, Levon; Wang, Yuting; Crittenden, Robert G.; Handley, Will J.; Percival, Will J.; Beutler, Florian; Brinkmann, Jonathan; Chuang, Chia-Hsun; Cuesta, Antonio J.; Eisenstein, Daniel J.; Kitaura, F.-Sh.; Koyama, Kazuya; L'Huillier, Benjamin; Nichol, Robert C.; Pieri, Matthew M.; Rodriguez-Torres, Sergio; Ross, Ashley J.; Rossi, Graziano; Sánchez, Ariel G.; Shafieloo, Arman; Tinker, Jeremy L.; Tojeiro, Rita; Vazquez, Jose A.; Zhang, Hanyu
Bibliographical reference
Nature Astronomy, Volume 1, p.627-632
Advertised on:
9
2017
Citations
402
Refereed citations
342
Description
A flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe dominated by a cosmological
constant (Λ) and cold dark matter (CDM) has been the working
model preferred by cosmologists since the discovery of cosmic
acceleration1,2. However, tensions of various degrees of
significance are known to be present among existing datasets within the
ΛCDM framework3-11. In particular, the Lyman-α
forest measurement of the baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) by the
Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey3 prefers a smaller
value of the matter density fraction ΩM than that
preferred by cosmic microwave background (CMB). Also, the recently
measured value of the Hubble constant, H0 = 73.24 ±
1.74 km s-1 Mpc-1 (ref. 12), is
3.4σ higher than the 66.93 ± 0.62 km s-1
Mpc-1 inferred from the Planck CMB data7. In this
work, we investigate whether these tensions can be interpreted as
evidence for a non-constant dynamical dark energy. Using the
Kullback-Leibler divergence13 to quantify the tension between
datasets, we find that the tensions are relieved by an evolving dark
energy, with the dynamical dark energy model preferred at a 3.5σ
significance level based on the improvement in the fit alone. While, at
present, the Bayesian evidence for the dynamical dark energy is
insufficient to favour it over ΛCDM, we show that, if the current
best-fit dark energy happened to be the true model, it would be
decisively detected by the upcoming Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument
survey14.
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The Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) contains the statistical information about the early seeds of the structure formation in our Universe. Its natural counterpart in the local universe is the distribution of galaxies that arises as a result of gravitational growth of those primordial and small density fluctuations. The characterization of the
FRANCISCO SHU
KITAURA JOYANES