Testing the cosmic opacity at higher redshifts: implication from quasars with available UV and X-ray observations

Abstract

In this paper, we present a cosmological model-independent test for the cosmic opacity at high redshifts (z5). We achieve this with the opacity-dependent luminosity distances derived from nonlinear relation between X-ray and UV emissions of quasars, combined with two types of opacity-independent luminosity distances derived from the Hubble parameter measurements and simulated gravitational wave (GW) events achievable with the Einstein Telescope (ET). In the framework of two phenomenological parameterizations adopted to describe cosmic opacity at high redshifts, our main results show that a transparent universe is supported by the current observational data at 2σ confidence level. However, the derived value of the cosmic opacity is slightly sensitive to the parametrization of τ(z), which highlights the importance of choosing a reliable parametrization to describe the optical depth τ(z) in the early universe. Compared with the previous works, the combination of the quasar data and the H(z)/GW observations in similar redshift ranges provides a novel way to confirm a transparent universe (ε=0 at higher redshifts z 5), with an accuracy of ε 10-2. More importantly, our findings indicate that a strong degeneracy between the cosmic opacity parameter and the parameters characterizing the LUV-LX relation of quasars, which reinforces the necessity of proper calibration for such new type of high-redshift standard candle (in a cosmological model-independent way).

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