The Hubble constant tension: current status and future perspectives through new cosmological probes
Abstract
The Hubble constant (H0) tension is one of the major open problems in modern cosmology. This tension is the discrepancy, ranging from 4 to 6 σ, between the H0 value estimated locally with the combination of Supernovae Ia (SNe Ia) + Cepheids and the cosmological H0 obtained through the study of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) radiation. The approaches adopted in Dainotti et al. 2021 (ApJ) and Dainotti et al. 2022 (Galaxies) are introduced. Through a binning division of the Pantheon sample of SNe Ia (Scolnic et al. 2018), the value of H0 has been estimated in each of the redshift-ordered bins and fitted with a function lowering with the redshift. The results show a decreasing trend of H0 with redshift. If this is not due to astrophysical biases or residual redshift evolution of the SNe Ia parameters, it can be explained in light of modified gravity theories, e.g., the f(R) scenarios. We also briefly describe the possible impact of high-z probes on the Hubble constant tension, such as Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and Quasars (QSOs), reported in Dainotti et al. 2022 (Galaxies) and Lenart et al. 2022 (ApJ), respectively.
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