Generalized second law on the apparent horizon plus w ≥ -1 and the dominant energy condition rules out hyperbolic spatial sections for homogeneous isotropic universes.
Cosmic Curvature Tested Directly from Observations
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abstract
Cosmic spatial curvature is a fundamental geometric quantity of the Universe. We investigate a model independent, geometric approach to measure spatial curvature directly from observations, without any derivatives of data. This employs strong lensing time delays and supernova distance measurements to measure the curvature itself, rather than just testing consistency with flatness. We define two curvature estimators, with differing error propagation characteristics, that can crosscheck each other, and also show how they can be used to map the curvature in redshift slices, to test constancy of curvature as required by the Robertson-Walker metric. Simulating realizations of redshift distributions and distance measurements of lenses and sources, we estimate uncertainties on the curvature enabled by next generation measurements. The results indicate that the model independent methods, using only geometry without assuming forms for the energy density constituents, can determine the curvature at the $\sim6\times10^{-3}$ level.
fields
gr-qc 1years
2025 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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The Generalized Second Law and the Spatial Curvature Index
Generalized second law on the apparent horizon plus w ≥ -1 and the dominant energy condition rules out hyperbolic spatial sections for homogeneous isotropic universes.