- #1
BWV
- 1,524
- 1,862
Thoughts on this finding? Does it really require new physics to explain?
https://arxiv.org/pdf/1903.07603.pdf
https://apnews.com/fac50d45a19f4239848b1712cfd22c36
Riess observed 70 Cepheid stars — stars that pulse at a well-observed rate — calculated their distance and rate, and then compared them with a certain type of supernovae that are used as measuring sticks. It took about two years for the Hubble telescope to make these measurements, but eventually Riess calculated an expansion rate of 74.
Using that 74 figure means the universe is somewhere between 12.5 billion and 13 billion years old. That’s much younger than the established estimates of 13.6 billion to 13.8 billion.
https://arxiv.org/pdf/1903.07603.pdf
https://apnews.com/fac50d45a19f4239848b1712cfd22c36