On measuring the absolute scale of baryon acoustic oscillations
Abstract
The baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) feature in the distribution of galaxies provides a fundamental standard ruler which is widely used to constrain cosmological parameters. In most analyses, the comoving length of the ruler is inferred from a combination of CMB observations and theory. However, this inferred length may be biased by various non-standard effects in early universe physics; this can lead to biased inferences of cosmological parameters such as H0, m and w, so it would be valuable to measure the absolute BAO length by combining a galaxy redshift survey and a suitable direct low-z distance measurement. One obstacle is that low-redshift BAO surveys mainly constrain the ratio rS / DV(z), where DV is a dilation scale which is not directly observable by standard candles. Here, we find a new approximation DV(z) (3/4) DL(4z/3) (1+ 4z/3)-1 (1 - 0.02455 z3 + 0.0105 z4) which connects DV to the standard luminosity distance DL at a somewhat higher redshift; this is shown to be very accurate (relative error < 0.2 percent) for all WMAP-compatible Friedmann models at z < 0.4, with very weak dependence on cosmological parameters H0, m, k, w. This provides a route to measure the absolute BAO length using only observations at z < 0.3, including type-Ia supernovae, and potentially future H0-free physical distance indicators such as gravitational lenses or gravitational wave standard sirens. This would provide a zero-parameter check of the standard cosmology at 103 < z < 105, and can constrain the number of relativistic species Neff with fewer degeneracies than the CMB.
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