Completing a nearly 30-year marathon, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has calibrated more than 40 "milepost markers" of space and time to help scientists precisely measure the expansion rate of the universe – a quest with a plot twist.
This collection of 36 images from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope features
galaxies that are all hosts to both Cepheid variables and supernovae. These two
celestial phenomena are both crucial tools used by astronomers to determine
astronomical distance, and have been used to refine our measurement of the
Hubble constant, the expansion rate of the universe.
The galaxies shown in this photo (from top row, left to bottom row, right)
are: NGC
7541, NGC
3021, NGC
5643, NGC
3254, NGC
3147, NGC
105, NGC
2608, NGC
3583, NGC
3147, Mrk
1337, NGC
5861, NGC
2525, NGC
1015, UGC
9391, NGC
691, NGC
7678, NGC
2442, NGC
5468, NGC
5917, NGC
4639, NGC
3972, The
Antennae Galaxies, NGC 5584, M106, NGC
7250, NGC
3370, NGC
5728, NGC
4424, NGC
1559, NGC
3982, NGC
1448, NGC
4680, M101, NGC
1365, NGC
7329, and NGC
3447. Credits: NASA, ESA, Adam G. Riess (STScI, JHU)
Pursuit of the universe's expansion rate began in the 1920s with
measurements by astronomers Edwin P. Hubble and Georges Lemaître. In 1998, this led to the discovery of "dark
energy," a mysterious repulsive force accelerating the
universe's expansion. In recent years, thanks to data from Hubble and other
telescopes, astronomers found another twist: a discrepancy between the
expansion rate as measured in the local universe compared to independent
observations from right after the big bang, which predict a different expansion
value.
The cause of this discrepancy remains a mystery. But Hubble data,
encompassing a variety of cosmic objects that serve as distance markers,
support the idea that something weird is going on, possibly involving brand new
physics.
"You are getting the most precise measure of the expansion rate for
the universe from the gold standard of telescopes and cosmic mile
markers," said Nobel Laureate Adam Riess of the Space Telescope Science
Institute (STScI) and the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.
"You are getting the most precise measure of the
expansion rate for the universe from the gold standard of telescopes and cosmic
mile markers."
--Nobel Laureate Adam Riess
Riess leads a scientific collaboration investigating the universe's
expansion rate called SH0ES, which stands for Supernova, H0, for the Equation
of State of Dark Energy. "This is what the Hubble Space Telescope was
built to do, using the best techniques we know to do it. This is likely
Hubble's magnum opus, because it would take another 30 years of Hubble's life
to even double this sample size," Riess said.
Riess's team's paper, to be published in the Special Focus issue of The Astrophysical Journal reports on completing the biggest and likely last major update on the
Hubble constant. The new results more than double the prior sample of cosmic
distance markers. His team also reanalyzed all of the prior data, with the
whole dataset now including over 1,000 Hubble orbits.
When NASA conceived of a large space telescope in the 1970s, one of the
primary justifications for the expense and extraordinary technical effort was
to be able to resolve Cepheids, stars that brighten and dim periodically, seen inside our Milky Way and
external galaxies. Cepheids have long been the gold standard of cosmic mile
markers since their utility was discovered by astronomer Henrietta Swan Leavitt
in 1912. To calculate much greater distances, astronomers use exploding stars
called Type Ia supernovae.
Combined, these objects built a "cosmic distance ladder" across
the universe and are essential to measuring the expansion rate of the universe,
called the Hubble constant after Edwin Hubble. That value is critical to
estimating the age of the universe and provides a basic test of our
understanding of the universe.
Starting right after Hubble's launch in 1990, the first set of observations
of Cepheid stars to refine the Hubble constant was undertaken by two teams:
the HST Key Project led by Wendy Freedman, Robert Kennicutt, Jeremy Mould, and Marc
Aaronson, and another by Allan Sandage and collaborators, that used Cepheids as
milepost markers to refine the distance measurement to nearby galaxies. By the
early 2000s the teams declared "mission accomplished" by reaching an
accuracy of 10 percent for the Hubble constant, 72 plus or minus 8 kilometers
per second per megaparsec.
In 2005 and again in 2009, the addition of powerful new cameras onboard the
Hubble telescope launched "Generation 2" of the Hubble constant
research as teams set out to refine the value to an accuracy of just one
percent. This was inaugurated by the SH0ES program. Several teams of astronomers
using Hubble, including SH0ES, have converged on a Hubble constant value of 73
plus or minus 1 kilometer per second per megaparsec. While other approaches
have been used to investigate the Hubble constant question, different teams
have come up with values close to the same number.
The SH0ES team includes long-time leaders Dr. Wenlong Yuan of Johns Hopkins
University, Dr. Lucas Macri of Texas A&M University, Dr. Stefano Casertano
of STScI, and Dr. Dan Scolnic of Duke University. The project was designed to
bracket the universe by matching the precision of the Hubble constant inferred
from studying the cosmic microwave background radiation leftover from the dawn of the universe.
"The Hubble constant is a very special number. It can be used to
thread a needle from the past to the present for an end-to-end test of our
understanding of the universe. This took a phenomenal amount of detailed
work," said Dr. Licia Verde, a cosmologist at ICREA and the ICC-University
of Barcelona, speaking about the SH0ES team's work.
The team measured 42 of the supernova milepost markers with Hubble. Because
they are seen exploding at a rate of about one per year, Hubble has, for all
practical purposes, logged as many supernovae as possible for measuring the
universe's expansion. Riess said, "We have a complete sample of all the
supernovae accessible to the Hubble telescope seen in the last 40 years."
Like the lyrics from the song "Kansas City," from the Broadway
musical Oklahoma, Hubble has "gone about as fur as it c'n go!"
Weird Physics?
The expansion rate of the universe was predicted to be slower than what
Hubble actually sees. By combining the Standard Cosmological Model of the Universe and measurements by the European Space Agency's Planck mission (which observed the relic cosmic microwave background from 13.8
billion years ago), astronomers predict a lower value for the Hubble constant:
67.5 plus or minus 0.5 kilometers per second per megaparsec, compared to the
SH0ES team's estimate of 73.
Given the large Hubble sample size, there is only a one-in-a-million chance
astronomers are wrong due to an unlucky draw, said Riess, a common threshold
for taking a problem seriously in physics. This finding is untangling what was
becoming a nice and tidy picture of the universe's dynamical evolution.
Astronomers are at a loss for an explanation of the disconnect between the
expansion rate of the local universe versus the primeval universe, but the
answer might involve additional physics of the universe.
Such confounding findings have made life more exciting for cosmologists
like Riess. Thirty years ago they started out to measure the Hubble constant to
benchmark the universe, but now it has become something even more interesting.
"Actually, I don't care what the expansion value is specifically, but I
like to use it to learn about the universe," Riess added.
NASA's new Webb Space Telescope will extend on
Hubble's work by showing these cosmic milepost markers at greater distances or
sharper resolution than what Hubble can see.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.
Source: Hubble
Reaches New Milestone in Mystery of Universe's Expansion Rate | NASA
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