Abstract
The baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) peak, seen in the cosmic matter distribution at redshifts up to [Formula: see text]3.5, reflects the continued expansion of the sonic horizon first identified in temperature anisotropies of the cosmic microwave background. The BAO peak position can now be measured to better than [Formula: see text]1% accuracy using galaxies and [Formula: see text]1.4–1.6% precision with Ly-[Formula: see text] forests and the clustering of quasars. In conjunction with the Alcock–Paczyński (AP) effect, which arises from the changing ratio of angular to spatial/redshift size of (presumed) spherically-symmetric source distributions with distance, the BAO measurement is viewed as one of the most powerful tools to use in assessing the geometry of the Universe. In this paper, we employ five BAO peak measurements from the final release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV, at average redshifts [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text], to carry out a direct head-to-head comparison of the standard model, [Formula: see text]CDM, and one of its principal competitors, known as the [Formula: see text] universe. For completeness, we complement the AP diagnostic with a volume-averaged distance probe that assumes a constant comoving distance scale [Formula: see text]. Both probes are free of uncertain parameters, such as the Hubble constant, and are therefore ideally suited for this kind of model selection. We find that [Formula: see text] is favored by these measurements over the standard model based solely on the AP effect, with a likelihood [Formula: see text]75% versus [Formula: see text]25%, while Planck-[Formula: see text]CDM is favored over [Formula: see text] based solely on the volume-averaged distance probe, with a likelihood [Formula: see text] versus [Formula: see text]20%. A joint analysis using both probes produces an inconclusive outcome, yielding comparable likelihoods to both models. We are therefore not able to confirm with this work that the BAO data, on their own, support an accelerating Universe.
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