Testing the cosmic distance duality relation with baryon acoustic oscillations and supernovae data
Abstract
One of the most fundamental relationships in modern cosmology is the cosmic distance duality relation (CDDR), which describes the relationship between the angular diameter distance (D A) and the luminosity distance (D L), and is expressed as: η(z)=D L(z)(1+z)-2/D A(z)=1. In this work, we conduct a comprehensive test of the CDDR by combining baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) data from the SDSS and DESI surveys with type Ia supernova (SN) data from PantheonPlus and DESY5. We utilize an artificial neural network approach to match the SN and BAO data at the same redshift. To explore potential violations of the CDDR, we consider three different parameterizations: (i) η(z)=1+η0z; (ii) η(z)=1+η0z/(1+z); (iii) η(z)=1+η0(1+z). Our results indicate that the calibration of the SN absolute magnitude M B plays a crucial role in testing potential deviations from the CDDR, as there exists a significant negative correlation between η0 and M B. For PantheonPlus analysis, when M B is treated as a free parameter, no evidence of CDDR violation is found. In contrast, fixing M B to the M B D20 prior with -19.2300.040 mag leads to a deviation at approximately the 2σ level, while fixing M B to the M B B23 prior with -19.3960.016 mag remains in agreement with the CDDR. Furthermore, overall analyses based on the SDSS+DESY5 and DESI+DESY5 data consistently show no evidence of the deviation from the CDDR.
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