New dark energy constraints from supernovae, microwave background and galaxy clustering
Abstract
Using the spectacular new high redshift supernova observations from the HST/GOODS program and previous supernova, CMB and galaxy clustering data, we make the most accurate measurements to date of the dark energy density rhoX as a function of cosmic time, constraining it in a rather model-independent way, assuming a flat universe. We find that Einstein's vanilla scenario where rhoX(z) is constant remains consistent with these new tight constraints, and that a Big Crunch or Big Rip is more than 50 gigayears away for a broader class of models allowing such cataclysmic events. We discuss popular pitfalls and hidden priors: parametrizing the equation-of-state wX(z) assumes positive dark energy density and no Big Crunch, and the popular parametrization wX(z)=w0 +w0' z has nominally strong constraints from CMB merely because w0' > 0 implies an unphysical exponential blow-up rhoX ~ e3 w0' z.
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