Carlos Quiroz - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Carlos Quiroz

Related Authors

Ester Piedipalumbo

Vincenzo Salzano

Ruth Lazkoz

Ruth Lazkoz

University of the Basque Country, Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea

Marek Biesiada

Michael Mortonson

Juan Carlos Hidalgo

BIAGIO DE SIMONE

Uploads

Papers by Carlos Quiroz

Research paper thumbnail of Comparative study of dark energy constraints from current observational data

Physical Review D, 2012

We examine how dark energy constraints from current observational data depend on the analysis met... more We examine how dark energy constraints from current observational data depend on the analysis methods used: the analysis of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), and that of galaxy clustering data. We generalize the flux-averaging analysis method of SNe Ia to allow correlated errors of SNe Ia, in order to reduce the systematic bias due to weak lensing of SNe Ia. We find that flux-averaging leads to larger errors on dark energy and cosmological parameters if only SN Ia data are used. When SN Ia data (the latest compilation by the SNLS team) are combined with WMAP 7 year results (in terms of our Gaussian fits to the probability distributions of the CMB shift parameters), the latest Hubble constant (H0) measurement using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and gamma ray burst (GRB) data, flux-averaging of SNe Ia increases the concordance with other data, and leads to significantly tighter constraints on the dark energy density at z = 1, and the cosmic curvature Ω k. The galaxy clustering measurements of H(z = 0.35)rs(z d) and rs(z d)/DA(z = 0.35) (where H(z) is the Hubble parameter, DA(z) is the angular diameter distance, and rs(z d) is the sound horizon at the drag epoch) by Chuang & Wang (2011) are consistent with SN Ia data, given the same pirors (CMB+H0+GRB), and lead to significantly improved dark energy constraints when combined. Current data are fully consistent with a cosmological constant and a flat universe.

Research paper thumbnail of Comparative study of dark energy constraints from current observational data

Physical Review D, 2012

We examine how dark energy constraints from current observational data depend on the analysis met... more We examine how dark energy constraints from current observational data depend on the analysis methods used: the analysis of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), and that of galaxy clustering data. We generalize the flux-averaging analysis method of SNe Ia to allow correlated errors of SNe Ia, in order to reduce the systematic bias due to weak lensing of SNe Ia. We find that flux-averaging leads to larger errors on dark energy and cosmological parameters if only SN Ia data are used. When SN Ia data (the latest compilation by the SNLS team) are combined with WMAP 7 year results (in terms of our Gaussian fits to the probability distributions of the CMB shift parameters), the latest Hubble constant (H0) measurement using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), and gamma ray burst (GRB) data, flux-averaging of SNe Ia increases the concordance with other data, and leads to significantly tighter constraints on the dark energy density at z = 1, and the cosmic curvature Ω k. The galaxy clustering measurements of H(z = 0.35)rs(z d) and rs(z d)/DA(z = 0.35) (where H(z) is the Hubble parameter, DA(z) is the angular diameter distance, and rs(z d) is the sound horizon at the drag epoch) by Chuang & Wang (2011) are consistent with SN Ia data, given the same pirors (CMB+H0+GRB), and lead to significantly improved dark energy constraints when combined. Current data are fully consistent with a cosmological constant and a flat universe.

Log In