Constraints on Dark Energy and Modified Gravity Models from Fast Radio Bursts and Late-Time Geometric Probes
Pith reviewed 2026-06-30 01:55 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Adding 104 localized fast radio bursts tightens baryon density constraints by 25-43 percent and Hubble constant bounds by 12-35 percent when combined with supernovae, chronometers, and BAO.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Inclusion of the 104 localized FRBs in joint analyses improves constraints on Omega_b by 25-43 percent, H_0 by 12-35 percent, and M_B by 10-32 percent across the models; dark energy parameters gain roughly 9 percent in wCDM and 8-22 percent in CPL, while f(R) parameters improve only 6-15 percent. The figure of merit rises between 48 and 91 percent, and AIC plus likelihood-ratio tests indicate moderate preference for wCDM, CPL, Hu-Sawicki, and Starobinsky models over Lambda CDM.
What carries the argument
Joint Bayesian posterior obtained by adding FRB dispersion-measure likelihoods to the combined CC + SNe + BAO likelihoods, evaluated across the six cosmological models and summarized by parameter error reductions and figure-of-merit ratios.
If this is right
- Tighter Omega_b bounds reduce a key degeneracy that affects late-time expansion history inferences.
- Narrower H_0 posteriors supply an independent late-time anchor that can be compared with other Hubble tension resolutions.
- Larger figure-of-merit gains in the CPL parametrization show that FRBs help most when dark energy is allowed to evolve.
- AIC and likelihood-ratio preference for extensions implies FRBs can statistically distinguish some dark energy or modified gravity behaviors from Lambda CDM.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Larger future FRB samples at higher redshifts would likely extend the modest gains seen in dark energy and f(R) parameters.
- The current limited sensitivity to modified gravity suggests that dispersion-measure precision or redshift coverage must increase before FRBs can strongly test gravity modifications.
- Joint analyses that also include early-universe data could break remaining degeneracies between Omega_b and other parameters.
Load-bearing premise
The 104 localized FRBs can be merged with the other datasets without introducing unaccounted systematics in dispersion measure or redshift that would shift the joint cosmological posteriors.
What would settle it
A new independent catalog of localized FRBs, analyzed with the same combination of probes, yields error reductions on Omega_b and H_0 that fall outside the reported 25-43 percent and 12-35 percent ranges.
read the original abstract
We investigate the impact of 104 localized FRBs on cosmological parameter estimation when combined with three established late-time probes: Cosmic Chronometers (CC), Type Ia Supernovae (SNe), and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO). By performing a Bayesian analysis of three dark energy models ($\Lambda$CDM, $w$CDM, and CPL) and three viable $f(R)$ gravity scenarios -- the Appleby-Battye (AB), Hu-Sawicki (HS), and Starobinsky (ST) models -- , we find that FRBs substantially improve the constraints on the baryon density $\Omega_{\rm b}$ by $25\%$--$43\%$, the Hubble constant $H_0$ by $12\%$--$35\%$, and the SNe absolute magnitude $M_B$ by $10\%$--$32\%$. Constraints on dark energy parameters show more modest improvements, with $w$ improving by $\sim 9\%$ in $w$CDM and $(w_0,w_a)$ improving by $\sim(8,22)\%$ in the CPL parametrization. Modified gravity parameters remain weakly constrained, with improvements of only $6\%$--$15\%$, indicating the limited sensitivity of current datasets to departures from $\Lambda$CDM. The Figure of Merit analysis shows overall improvements ranging from $\sim 48\%$ ($\Lambda$CDM) to $\sim 91\%$ (CPL), driven by enhanced precision in the $(H_0, \Omega_{\rm b})$ plane. Model comparison reveals moderate statistical preference for extensions beyond $\Lambda$CDM: AIC strongly favors $w$CDM, CPL, HS, and ST with $\Delta\mathrm{AIC} < -7$, and LRT yields $p \leq 0.004$, while BIC returns to positive evidence ($-3.2 < \Delta\mathrm{BIC} < -2.7$). These results show that FRBs may be useful as a complementary probe, particularly for constraining $\Omega_{\rm b}$ and alleviating key late-time degeneracies.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript performs a Bayesian analysis combining 104 localized FRBs with cosmic chronometers, Type Ia supernovae, and BAO data to constrain parameters in ΛCDM, wCDM, CPL, and three f(R) models (Appleby-Battye, Hu-Sawicki, Starobinsky). It reports that FRBs tighten constraints on Ω_b by 25–43%, H0 by 12–35%, and M_B by 10–32%, with more modest gains on dark energy parameters, FoM improvements of 48–91%, and moderate statistical preference for extended models via AIC, BIC, and likelihood ratio tests.
Significance. If the modeling assumptions hold, the work provides concrete evidence that current FRB samples can serve as a complementary late-time probe, particularly for Ω_b and H0, while extending the test to viable modified gravity scenarios. The multi-model comparison and FoM analysis strengthen the case for FRBs in degeneracy breaking.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract and §3] Abstract and §3 (FRB likelihood construction): the 25–43% improvement on Ω_b is the largest and most load-bearing numerical claim, yet the DM_host term in DM_obs = DM_MW + DM_IGM(z, Ω_b, H0, …) + DM_host is described without stating whether its mean and scatter are fixed or marginalized; any mismatch directly shifts the Ω_b posterior and can inflate the reported fractional gain.
- [§4] §4 (results and posterior summaries): the percentage improvements on Ω_b, H0, and M_B are quoted without the associated covariance matrices, mock validation, or explicit error budgets on the baseline (CC+SNe+BAO) constraints, preventing assessment of whether the gains survive changes in DM_host modeling or redshift assignment.
- [§5] §5 (model comparison): AIC and LRT favor extensions with ΔAIC < −7 and p ≤ 0.004, but the manuscript does not report the effective number of parameters or the exact form of the FRB likelihood contribution to the total χ², which is required to interpret whether the preference is driven by the new data or by prior volume effects.
minor comments (2)
- [§2] Notation for the three f(R) models is consistent, but the text would benefit from a brief table summarizing the free parameters and priors for each model alongside the dark energy parametrizations.
- [Figure captions] Figure captions for the posterior contours should explicitly state the 68% and 95% levels and whether the contours include the full joint dataset or the baseline only.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed comments. We respond point-by-point to the three major comments below, indicating where revisions will be made to improve clarity and completeness.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and §3] Abstract and §3 (FRB likelihood construction): the 25–43% improvement on Ω_b is the largest and most load-bearing numerical claim, yet the DM_host term in DM_obs = DM_MW + DM_IGM(z, Ω_b, H0, …) + DM_host is described without stating whether its mean and scatter are fixed or marginalized; any mismatch directly shifts the Ω_b posterior and can inflate the reported fractional gain.
Authors: We agree that explicit specification is required. In the analysis the mean and scatter of DM_host were held fixed at standard literature values rather than marginalized. We will revise §3 to state this choice explicitly, cite the adopted values, and add a short discussion of the effect on the Ω_b posterior. revision: yes
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Referee: [§4] §4 (results and posterior summaries): the percentage improvements on Ω_b, H0, and M_B are quoted without the associated covariance matrices, mock validation, or explicit error budgets on the baseline (CC+SNe+BAO) constraints, preventing assessment of whether the gains survive changes in DM_host modeling or redshift assignment.
Authors: The referee correctly identifies missing supporting material. We will add the baseline covariance matrices (or their principal components) to an appendix, include a concise description of the mock validation performed on simulated FRB catalogs, and provide an explicit error budget table comparing the CC+SNe+BAO-only and full-dataset constraints. Sensitivity tests to DM_host mean/scatter variations will also be reported. revision: yes
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Referee: [§5] §5 (model comparison): AIC and LRT favor extensions with ΔAIC < −7 and p ≤ 0.004, but the manuscript does not report the effective number of parameters or the exact form of the FRB likelihood contribution to the total χ², which is required to interpret whether the preference is driven by the new data or by prior volume effects.
Authors: We will clarify the likelihood construction. The total log-likelihood is the sum of the individual log-likelihoods; the FRB term is a sum of independent Gaussian terms in the observed dispersion measure. The effective number of parameters for each model is the count of free cosmological parameters (e.g., six for ΛCDM). We will add these details and the explicit FRB χ² contribution to §5. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
The paper reports numerical improvements in posterior widths obtained by multiplying a standard FRB dispersion-measure likelihood (DM_obs = DM_MW + DM_IGM(z, Ω_b, H_0, …) + DM_host) with the CC + SNe + BAO likelihoods and running MCMC on ΛCDM, wCDM, CPL, and three f(R) models. The quoted percentage tightenings (25–43 % on Ω_b, etc.) are direct outputs of that comparison; they are not obtained by re-expressing any fitted quantity as a prediction or by reducing any equation to a self-citation. No self-definitional, fitted-input-called-prediction, or load-bearing self-citation steps appear in the derivation chain.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (3)
- Omega_b
- H0
- w, wa
axioms (2)
- domain assumption FLRW metric with standard matter and radiation content
- domain assumption Viability of Appleby-Battye, Hu-Sawicki, and Starobinsky f(R) forms
Reference graph
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