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View Full Version : H0LiCOW! Hubble's constant update paves way for 'new physics'



Clear Light
26th January 2017, 17:36
The Register (26 Jan 2017) : "Standard model of cosmology may be incorrect, say experts"
(https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/01/26/new_measurement_for_hubbles_constant_suggests_new_physics/)

https://regmedia.co.uk/2017/01/25/quasar.jpg?x=648&y=348&crop=1
HE0435-1223, the quasar at the centre of this image, creates four images of the distant galaxies (Photo credit: ESA/Hubble, NASA, Suyu et al)

The latest measurement of the Hubble constant is higher than previous values, prompting scientists to believe there may be “new physics” beyond the standard model of cosmology yet to be discovered.

Named after the physicist Edwin Hubble, the Hubble constant is a measurement of how fast the cosmos is expanding. It provides a crucial estimate of the universe’s scale, age, and density and can be used to probe the properties of dark energy and dark matter.

Hubble noticed that galaxies were moving away at a speed proportional to their distance from Earth – also known as Hubble’s Law. The Hubble constant is the value of the proportional change in Hubble’s Law.

The Hubble constant has changed over time. Initial measurements were too high, but estimates have vastly improved since Hubble’s day. A new paper published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society shows the latest value is accurate to 3.8 per cent. [1]

A large international team of physicists estimated the Hubble constant using a programme they call H0LiCOW (for H0 [abbreviation for Hubble constant] Lenses in COSMOGRAIL’s Wellspring). Data taken from telescopes on Earth and in space was used to look at the gravitational lensing effect between three massive galaxies wedged in between distant quasars and planet Earth.

The light from quasars is bent around the galaxies, creating multiple images of the background quasar.

Einstein’s theory of general relativity states that mass causes light to bend. Since the mass distribution around the surrounding galaxies is different, some light is bent more and takes longer to reach Earth.

The relationship between the time delays and the distance of the galaxies allows researchers to arrive at a new value for Hubble’s constant.

Previous measurements derived from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) show Planck’s Hubble constant value at 67.8±0.9 kilometres per second per megaparsec – lower than the one calculated by the H0LiCOW team at 71.9±2.7 kilometres per second per megaparsec.

“When people use the CMB from the Planck satellite, they are able to fit their data with a relatively simple model – the standard model of cosmology. But one of the things that these CMB experiments don’t give you – if you take them by themselves – is the Hubble constant.

“If you look at their results, they can give very precise measurements of Hubble’s constant after making strong assumptions based on the standard model of cosmology,” Professor Christopher Fassnacht, coauthor of the paper and researcher at University of California, Davis, told The Register.

The Hubble constant depends on specific properties of the universe. Changes in parameters – such as the number of types of neutrinos, or their masses, or the amount of dark energy – give a different picture of the cosmos and shift the constant.

The small discrepancies in the measured values of Hubble’s constant could mean the assumptions in the standard model of cosmology are wrong, Fassnacht explained. It could mean that there’s something beyond the standard model that scientists don’t know about yet.

“The Hubble constant is crucial for modern astronomy, as it can help to confirm or refute whether our picture of the Universe – composed of dark energy, dark matter and normal matter – is actually correct, or if we are missing something fundamental,” said Professor Sherry Suyu, coauthor of the paper and researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, Germany.

H0LiCOW’s result is closer to the value calculated by the trio of physicists who won the Nobel Prize in 2011.

Professor Saul Perlmutter from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, professor Brian Schmidt, vice-chancellor of the Australian National University, and professor Adam Riess from Johns Hopkins University discovered that the universe is expanding at an accelerated pace.


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34892
Oh, I couldn't let it pass, what a superb Acronym eh ? LOL :wink:

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A quote from today's Guardian : Speedy universe expansion challenges Einstein’s theory (https://www.theguardian.com/science/across-the-universe/2017/jan/26/speedy-universe-expansion-challenges-einsteins-theory)


“The expansion rate of the Universe is now starting to be measured in different ways with such high precision that actual discrepancies may possibly point towards new physics beyond our current knowledge of the Universe.”


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[1] : H0LiCOW V. New COSMOGRAIL time delays of HE0435-1223: H0 to 3.8% precision from strong lensing in a flat ΛCDM model (https://arxiv.org/abs/1607.01790)

Ernie Nemeth
26th January 2017, 18:15
The red-shift of distant sources may have entirely different reasons than as proposed by science. Its assumptions are too fraught with ambiguity and outright bias. Scientists need funding, they cannot pursue their own gut feelings. They must adhere to the current meme or be ostracized. All their findings are suspect because there is an area that is off-limits, taboo. It is this area that is purposely avoided because it would lead to a completely different cosmology, and alter our fundamental understanding of the universe. and we can't have that.

Those that are the gatekeepers of this secret knowledge are happy to see the scientific community continuing down this dead-end road.

I believe one of the most important pieces of hard science that has been over-looked is the asymmetric parity of matter creation. This will alter the red-shift data and lead to the proper definition of Hubble's Constant.

http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?95587-Fresh-doubts-cast-on-Tunguska-impact-theory&p=1130037#post1130037

boolacalaca
26th January 2017, 22:25
I'm wondering what everyone thinks of the "Shapiro Effect" -- summarized as follows:

"You may not have heard of the Shapiro effect before, but you are about to find out that it is the explanation for the distance-redshift effect discovered by Edwin Hubble, and it has been proven experimentally many times!

It all started with a short letter in the Journal of Astrophysics in 1964 by Dr. Irwin I. Shapiro of the Lincoln Labs of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which stated in part:

"...according to the general theory, the speed of a light wave depends on the strength of the gravitational potential along its path."

He was speaking, of course, of Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity. Dr. Shapiro, it seems, was the first to make use of a previously forgotten facet of relativity theory — that the speed of light is reduced when it passes through a gravitational field.

Imagine light being emitted from a distant galaxy one hundred million light years away (meaning the light has to travel a hundred million years to reach us). As that light wends its way tirelessly toward earth, it passes continually through the extremely small but ever-present gravitational field present in outer space — the cumulative gravitational field of every star and galaxy along its path. As we now know from Dr. Shapiro’s experiments, that light will experience a small, cumulative deceleration from the forces of this gravitational field acting at long range. This is not an interaction of the light photon with interstellar matter, which would smear the light and provide a visible signature, but simply a gravitationally induced time delay. The photon’s interaction with gravity does not alter its path, nor change its characteristic, except by gradually decreasing its velocity and energy.

By the time light from a distant galaxy reaches Earth and our telescopes, it has less velocity than when it left its host star, and thus less energy than when it started. In a word, it is redshifted! And not because the distant source galaxy is receding, but because the inter-galactic gravitational field has reduced its energy. The Shapiro effect has shown us that a redshift is to be expected, which increases with distance! That is just what Hubble observed, but with an explanation which does not require the Doppler effect, an expanding universe, or a Big Bang."

Here's a link to the whole explanation -- https://www.ourcivilisation.com/thacker/shapiro.htm

Ernie Nemeth
30th January 2017, 16:18
"tired light". Yes , I've heard of that. They have managed to freeze photons in place in the lab, so it might have merit. The universal manifold would then have to have unknown properties.
That holds with the newest data, since today science believes there is no properties to space because there is no ether - and evidence is mounting that there is in fact an ether and that its properties are the missing links especially is cosmology but also in pure theoretical physics.