18 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE July 2019
mismatchbeingsomestatisticalflukeis about1 in7,000.
Clearly,there’ssomethingamiss.
Hutereragrees.“TheHubbletensionis real,”hesays.
Nowwhat?
Whilesomescientistsstillthinktheremaybean
undiscoverederrorineitheroneofthetwoapproaches(or
maybeinboth!),mostbelievethattheresultsaresolid.But
thatdoesn’tmeantheyknowhowtoexplainthediscrepancy.
EvenverycreativetheoristslikeHarvard’sLoebarestumped.
“I triedtocomeupwitha solutiontopresentat the
symposium,”hesays,“butI havenothingnewtoreport.It’s
nota simpleproblemtosolve.”
Onething’sforsure:ThesuggestionthatourMilkyWay
Galaxymaysitina hugelocalvoid,whichwouldhavea
higher-than-averageexpansionrate,doesn’twork.“That
effectis muchtoosmall,”saysLoeb.“Moreover,it wouldalso
leaveanimprintonthecosmicmicrowavebackground.”
Riessagrees.“Ifcausedbya localvoid,thedifference
betweenthetwoestimatesofH 0 wouldbelessthana percent,
not9%,”hesays.Riessis veryconfidentaboutthehigh-H 0
resultsoftheSH0ESteam,partlybecausesomealternative
methodsofdeterminingtheHubbleconstantarriveat a
similarvalue.“Maybewe’rejustnotcreativeenough”tosolve
theriddle,hesays.
Onefar-fetchedpossibilitymightbethatdarkmatterhas
beendestroyingitselfovertime,weakeningitsabilitytoslow
theuniverse’sexpansion.Butcomingupwithviablemodels
ofdecayingdarkmatterhasturnedouttobedifficult.In
Berlin,theoreticalphysicistLisaRandall(HarvardUniversity)
presentedherverypreliminaryideasonwhatshecallsa
“quintessentialsolutiontotheHubblepuzzle,”inwhichdark
matterwouldbecomelessmassiveovertime.“But,”shesaid
at theconference,“ifthegapremainsaslargeas9%,this
can’tbethefinalsolution.It’sa verychallengingproblem to
address.”Sincethenshe’sbeenabletorevisethemodelto
provide“arathergoodfittoexistingdata”.
Anotherpotentialsolutionwouldbea slowchangein
the‘density’ofdarkenergyovercosmologicaltime.Recent
X-rayobservationsof1,600distantquasarsappearedto
indicatejustthat.However,“thejuryis definitelystillout,”
acknowledgesteamleaderGuidoRisaliti(Universityof
Florence,Italy).“We’llhavetolookat manymoremodels in
greatdetailbeforewecansolvethiscosmicconundrum.”
BothRandallandLoebarereluctanttoconsider
speculativetheoriesonmodifiedgravitythatmightsomehow
explainawaytheproblem.“Thatwouldbeunwarrantedby
commonsense,”saysLoeb.“Itwouldbelikekillinga flywith
anatomicbomb.”
Still,accordingtoFreedman,aninformalvoteamongst
scientistsduringa cosmologyconferenceinChicagoin
earlyOctober 2018 revealedthatthevastmajoritythought
thatsomeformof‘newphysics’willbeneededtosolve
themystery.“It’swhatcosmologistsreallyhope,”says
Huterer.“Whoknows,”commentsSchmidt,“theremightbe
somethingfundamentallywrongwithourinterpretationof
thecosmicmicrowavebackground.”
Temperature
fluctuations
(microkelvin
2 )
Angularseparation
STEP 1: Astronomers measure the patchiness
of the cosmic microwave background. (Data
from Planck shown.)
How astronomers calculate H 0 from the CMB
STEP 2: The map gives them the power spectrum,
which plots how large the temperature differences are
between two locations on the sky, depending on how
far apart those locations are.
H^0
FROM CMB: GREGG DINDERMAN /
S&T
, PLANCK DATA (2): ESA / PLANCK COLLABORATION, GALAXY
WEDGE: LEAH TISCIONE /
S&T
;^ EXPLOSION GRAPHIC: TATIANAZAETS / ISTOCK / GETTY IMAGES PLUS
COSMIC EXPANSION PUZZLE
“That would be unwarranted by common
sense,” says Loeb. “It would be like killing
a fly with an atomic bomb.”