High-redshift long gamma-ray bursts Hubble diagram as a test of basic cosmological relations
Published: 08/2020
Top panels: the observed luminosity distance modulus µ versus redshift (HD) in linear z-scale for the SN Ia and LGRB samples. Black points are the median values of µ with linear step ∆z = 0.3 for the LGRB sample. Bottom panels: the residuals ∆µ from the standard ΛCDM model for the observed luminosity distance modulus. Left: without the correction for the GLB and MB. Right: corrected with k = 0.5.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 496, Issue 2, pp.1530-1544
Shirokov S. I., Sokolov I. V., Lovyagin N. Yu, Amati L., Baryshev Yu V., Sokolov V. V., Gorokhov, V. L.
We examine the prospects of the high-redshift long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) Hubble diagram as a test of the basic cosmological principles. Analysis of the Hubble diagram allows us to test several fundamental cosmological principles using the directly observed flux-distance-redshift relation. Modern LGRBs data together with the correlation between the spectral peak energy and the isotropic equivalent radiated energy (the so-called Amati relation) can be used for construction of the Hubble diagram at the model-independent level. We emphasize observational selection effects, which inevitably exist and distort the theoretically predicted relations. An example is the weak and strong gravitational lensing bias effect for high-redshift LGRB in the presence of limited observational sensitivity (Malmquist bias). After bias correction, there is a tendency to vacuum-dominated models with Ω_Λ→0.9 , Ω_m → 0.1. Forthcoming gamma-ray observations by the Transient High-Energy Sky and Early Universe Surveyor (THESEUS) space mission together with ground- and space-based multimessenger facilities will allow us to improve essentially the restrictions on alternative basic principles of cosmological models.
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