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Multiple Measurements of Quasars Acting as Standard Probes: Exploring the Cosmic Distance Duality Relation at Higher Redshift

Xiaogang Zheng, Kai Liao, Marek Biesiada, Shuo Cao, Tong-Hua Liu, Zong-Hong Zhu

2020The Astrophysical Journal46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract General relativity reproduces main current cosmological observations, assuming the validity of the cosmic distance duality relation (CDDR) at all scales and epochs. However, CDDR is poorly tested in the redshift interval between the farthest observed Type Ia supernovae and that of the cosmic microwave background. We present a new idea of testing the validity of CDDR, through the multiple measurements of high-redshift quasars. Luminosity distances are derived from the relation between the UV and X-ray luminosities of quasars, while angular diameter distances are obtained from the compact structure in radio quasars. This will create a valuable opportunity where two different cosmological distances from the same kind of objects at high redshifts are compared. Our constraints are more stringent than other currently available results based on different observational data and show no evidence for the deviation from CDDR at z ∼ 3. Such an accurate model-independent test of fundamental cosmological principles can become a milestone in precision cosmology.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsCosmic microwave backgroundRedshiftAstrophysicsQuasarLuminosity distanceCOSMIC cancer databaseDuality (order theory)Angular diameterCosmologyObservational cosmologyLuminosityCosmic background radiationDistance measuresGeneral relativityCosmic distance ladderTheoretical physicsSupernovaType (biology)AstronomyDark energyShape of the universeMetric expansion of spaceTheory of relativityGalaxyUniverseRelation (database)Standard Model (mathematical formulation)Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaCosmology and Gravitation TheoriesAstronomy and Astrophysical Research