Paper

New expansion rate anomalies at characteristic redshifts geometrically determined using DESI-DR2 BAO and DES-SN5YR observations

and

Published 30 September 2025 © 2025 IOP Publishing Ltd. All rights, including for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies, are reserved.
, , Citation Purba Mukherjee and Anjan A Sen 2025 Rep. Prog. Phys. 88 098401DOI 10.1088/1361-6633/ae082c

0034-4885/88/9/098401

Abstract

We perform a model-independent reconstruction of the cosmic distances using the multi-task Gaussian process framework as well as knot-based spline techniques with Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI)-DR2 baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) and DES-SN5YR datasets. We calibrate the comoving sound horizon at the baryon drag epoch $r_\mathrm{d}$ to the Planck value, ensuring consistency with early-Universe physics. With the reconstructed cosmic distances and their derivatives, we obtain seven characteristic redshifts in the range $0.3 \unicode{x2A7D} z \unicode{x2A7D} 1.7$. We derive the normalized expansion rate of the Universe E(z) at these redshifts. Our findings reveal a significant deviations of approximately 4–5σ from the Planck 2018 cold dark matter Λcold dark matter predictions, particularly pronounced in the redshift range $z \sim 0.35$–0.55. These anomalies are consistently observed across both reconstruction methods and combined datasets, indicating robust late-time tensions in the expansion rate of the Universe and which are distinct from the existing ‘Hubble Tension’. This could signal new physics beyond the standard cosmological framework at this redshift range. Our findings underscore the role of characteristic redshifts as sensitive indicators of expansion rate anomalies and motivate further scrutiny with forthcoming datasets from DESI-5YR BAO, Euclid, and LSST. These future surveys will tighten constraints and will confirm whether these late-time anomalies arise from new fundamental physics or unresolved systematics in the data.

Export citation and abstractBibTeXRIS

Access this article

The computer you are using is not registered by an institution with a subscription to this article. Please choose one of the options below.

Purchase from

Article Galaxy
CCC RightFind

Purchase this article from our trusted document delivery partners.

Make a recommendation

To gain access to this content, please complete the Recommendation Form and we will follow up with your librarian or Institution on your behalf.

For corporate researchers we can also follow up directly with your R&D manager, or the information management contact at your company. Institutional subscribers have access to the current volume, plus a 10-year back file (where available).

Please wait… references are loading.