Impact of a locally measured H0 on the interpretation of cosmic chronometer data
Abstract
Whereas many measurements in cosmology depend on the use of integrated distances or time, galaxies evolving passively on a time scale much longer than their age difference allow us to determine the expansion rate H(z) solely as a function of the redshift-time derivative dz/dt. These model-independent `cosmic chronometers' can therefore be powerful discriminators for testing different cosmologies. In previous applications, the available sources strongly disfavoured models (such as LambdaCDM) predicting a variable acceleration, preferring instead a steady expansion rate over the redshift range 0 < z < 2. A more recent catalog of 30 objects appears to suggest non-steady expansion. In this paper, we show that such a result is entirely due to the inclusion of a high, locally-inferred value of the Hubble constant H0 as an additional datum in a set of otherwise pure cosmic-chronometer measurements. This H0, however, is not the same as the background Hubble constant if the local expansion rate is influenced by a Hubble Bubble. Used on their own, the cosmic chronometers completely reverse this conclusion, favouring instead a constant expansion rate out to z ~ 2.
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