Constraints on Dark Energy from Supernovae, Gamma-Ray Bursts, Acoustic Oscillations, Nucleosynthesis, Large-Scale Structure, and the Hubble Constant

Wright, E. L.

United States

Abstract

The luminosity distance versus redshift law is now measured using supernovae and γ-ray bursts, and the angular size distance is measured at the surface of last scattering by the CMB and at z=0.35 by baryon acoustic oscillations. In this paper, this data is fit to models for the equation of state with w=-1, w=constant, and w(z)=w0+wa(1-a). The last model is poorly constrained by the distance data, leading to unphysical solutions where the dark energy dominates at early times unless the large-scale structure and acoustic scale constraints are modified to allow for early-time dark energy effects. A flat ΛCDM model is consistent with all the data.

2007 The Astrophysical Journal
eHST 126