TY  - JOUR
TI  - Constraining dark energy with X-ray galaxy clusters, supernovae and the cosmic microwave background
ID  - discovery10175
IS  - 2
SN  - 0035-8711
JF  - MON NOT R ASTRON SOC
PB  - BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
Y1  - 2005/06/21/
A1  - Rapetti, D
A1  - Allen, SW
A1  - Weller, J
SP  - 555 
N2  - We present new constraints on the evolution of dark energy from an analysis of cosmic microwave background, supernova and X-ray galaxy cluster data. Our analysis employs a minimum of priors and exploits the complementary nature of these data sets. We examine a series of dark energy models with up to three free parameters: the current dark energy equation of state w(0), the early-time equation of state wet, and the scalefactor at transition at. From a combined analysis of all three data sets, assuming a constant equation of state and that the Universe is flat, we measure w(0) = -1.05(-0.12)(+0.10) Including wet as a free parameter and allowing the transition scalefactor to vary over the range 0.5 < alpha(t) < 0.95 where the data sets have discriminating power, we measure w(0) = -1.27(-0.39)(+0.33) and w(et) = -0.66(-0.62)(+0.44). We find no significant evidence for evolution in the dark energy equation-of-state parameter with redshift. Marginal hints of evolution in the supernovae data become less significant when the cluster constraints are also included in the analysis. The complementary nature of the data sets leads to a tight constraint on the mean matter density Omega m and alleviates a number of other parameter degeneracies, including that between the scalar spectral index n(s), the physical baryon density Omega(b)h(2) and the optical depth tau. This complementary nature also allows us to examine models in which we drop the prior on the curvature. For non-flat models with a constant equation of state, we measure w(0) = -1.09(-0.15)(+0.12) and obtain a tight constraint on the current dark energy density Omega(de) = 0.70 +/- 0.03. For dark energy models other than a cosmological constant, energy-momentum conservation requires the inclusion of spatial perturbations in the dark energy component. Our analysis includes such perturbations, assuming a sound speed c(s)(2) = 1 in the dark energy fluid as expected for quintessence scenarios. For our most general dark energy model, not including such perturbations would lead to spurious constraints on wet, which would be tighter than those mentioned above by approximately a factor of 2 with the current data.
KW  - supernovae : general
KW  -  galaxies : clusters : general
KW  -  cosmic microwave background
KW  -  cosmology : observations
KW  -  cosmology : theory
KW  -  X-rays : galaxies : clusters
KW  -  PROBE WMAP OBSERVATIONS
KW  -  HUBBLE-SPACE-TELESCOPE
KW  -  EQUATION-OF-STATE
KW  -  HIGH-REDSHIFT SUPERNOVAE
KW  -  COSMOLOGICAL CONSTANT
KW  -  LUMINOSITY DISTANCE
KW  -  POWER SPECTRUM
KW  -  ANISOTROPY
KW  -  UNIVERSE
KW  -  ACCELERATION
VL  - 360
EP  -  564
UR  - https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10175/
AV  - public
ER  -