Cosmology Results from DESI

Yesterday evening (10pm Irish Time) saw the release of new results from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI), completing a trio of major announcements of cosmological results in the space of two days (the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and the Euclid Q1 release being the others). I didn’t see the DESI press conference but you can read the press release here.

There were no fewer than eight DESI papers on the astro-ph section of the arXiv this morning. Here are the titles with links:

You can see from the titles that the first seven of these relate to the second data release (DR2; three years of data) from DESI; the last one listed here is a description of the first data release (DR1), which is now publicly available.

Obviously there is a lot of information to digest in these papers so here are two members of the DESI collaboration talking with Shaun Hotchkiss on Cosmology Talks about the key messages from the analysis of Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (the BAO in the titles of the new papers):

A lot has been made in the press coverage of these results about the evidence that the standard cosmological model is incomplete; see, e.g., here. Here are a few comments.

As I see it, taken on their own, the DESI BAO results are broadly consistent with the ΛCDM model as specified by the parameters determined by the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) inferred from Planck. Issues do emerge, however, when these results are combined with other data sets. The most intriguing of these arises with the dark energy contribution. The simplest interpretation of dark energy is that it is a cosmological constant (usually called Λ) which – as explained here – corresponds to a perfect fluid with an equation-of-state p=wρc2 with w=-1. In this case the effective mass density of the dark energy ρ remains constant as the universe expands. To parametrise departures from this constant behaviour, cosmologists have replaced this form with the form w(a)=w0+wa(1-a) where a(t) is the cosmic scale factor. A cosmological constant Λ would correspond to a point (w0=-1, wa=0) in the plane defined by these parameters, but the only requirement for dark energy to result in cosmic acceleration is that w<-1/3, not that w=-1.

The DESI team allow (w0, wa) to act as free parameters and let the DESI data constrain them, either alone or in combinations with other data sets, finding evidence for departures from the “standard values”. Here’s an example plot:

The DESI data don’t include the standard point (at the intersection of the two dashed lines) but the discrepancy gets worse when other data (such as supernovae and CMB) are folded in, as in this picture. The weight of evidence suggests a dark energy contribution which is decreasing with time.

These results are certainly intriguing, and a lot of credit is due to the DESI collaboration for working so hard to identify and remove possible systematics in the analysis (see the papers above) but what do they tell us about ΛCDM?

My view is that we’ve never known what the dark energy actually is or why it is so large that it represents 70% of the overall energy density of the Universe. The Λ in ΛCDM is really just a place-holder, not there for any compelling physical reason but because it is the simplest way of accounting for the observations. In other words, it’s what it is because of Occam’s Razor and nothing more. As with any working hypothesis, the standard cosmological model will get updated whenever new information comes to light (as it is doing now) and/or if we get new physical insights into the origin of dark energy.

Do the latest observations cast doubt on the standard model? I’d say no. We’re seeing an evolutionary change from “We have no idea what the dark energy is but we think it might be a cosmological constant” to “We still have no idea what the dark energy is but we think it might not be a cosmological constant”.

10 Responses to “Cosmology Results from DESI”

  1. What about the negative neutrino mass though?

    • telescoper's avatar
      telescoper Says:

      Well it’s not exactly negative neutrino masses, it’s a neutrino mass parameter which is extended to negative masses for fitting purposes. There are a number of ways that have nothing to do with neutrino masses why the data might push this parameter to a negative value.

    • telescoper's avatar
      telescoper Says:

      I quote: “It should be emphasized that this is an effective parameter and any evidence for negative values should be interpreted as a signature of unidentified systematic errors or possibly of new physics which may be unrelated to neutrinos, rather than as a direct sign of negative mass neutrinos.”

      • Sure. It was “possibly of new physics” I was referring to, which would be something not (so far at least) included in LambdaCDM.

      • telescoper's avatar
        telescoper Says:

        Yes, if the data push a model parameter into an unphysical range then that could indicate that the model is inadequate (or that some form of systematic is present). I agree that the former would be more exciting

  2. The DESI analyses are all done assuming FLRW – so all conclusions concerning Λ (evolving or not) depend on isotropy being valid. I could not however find any statement about whether the BAO signal is indeed the same in all the directions surveyed?

    • telescoper's avatar
      telescoper Says:

      Quite so. In fact all the parameters of the model are predicated on FLRW (and on GR…)

      DESI not an all-sky survey though so the specific question you ask is going to be hard to answer.

      • True – but the survey covers 14,000 square degrees i.e. ~1/3 of the sky. Surely with their exquisitely precise data they can do at least a consistency check of the crucial assumption upon which all the conclusions rest?

      • telescoper's avatar
        telescoper Says:

        Come to think of it, though, what they could do is put a large-scale mode in the model and see if the data push it to a non-zero value….

  3. […] with all the cosmological goings-on of the past couple of weeks – see here, here and here – I quite forgot to mention another important set of results. These are from the final data […]

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