The direct measurement of gravitational potential decay rate at cosmological scales II -- Improved dark energy constraint from z1.4
Abstract
The gravitational potential decay rate (DR) is caused by the cosmic acceleration of the universe, providing a direct probe into the existence of dark energy (DE). We present measurements of DR and explore its implications for DE models using the Data Release 9 galaxy catalog of DESI imaging surveys and the Planck cosmic microwave background maps. Our analysis includes six redshift bins within the range of 0.2 z<1.4 and achieves a total significance of 3.1σ, extending the DR measurements to a much higher redshift comparing to Dong et al. (2022), which focused on 0.2 z<0.8. Other improvements involve addressing potential systematics in the DR-related measurements of correlation functions, including imaging systematics and magnification bias. We explore the constraining power of DR both the wCDM model and the w0waCDM model. We find that, the addition of DR can significantly improves DE constraints, over Sloan Digital Sky Survey baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data alone or PantheonPlus supernovae (SNe) compilation alone, although it shows only a modest improvement for DESI BAO. In the wCDM model, all three probes-DR, DESI BAO and SNe-favor w=-1. For the w0waCDM, while DESI BAO prefers w0>-1 and wa<0, SNe Ia and DR data constrain w0=-0.94+0.11-0.13 and wa=-0.22+0.57-0.97. Namely SNe Ia and DR data has no preference on dynamical dark energy over .
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