Measuring the Hubble constant through the galaxy pairwise peculiar velocity
Abstract
The Hubble constant H0, the current expansion rate of the universe, is one of the most important parameters in cosmology. The cosmic expansion regulates the mutually approaching motion of a pair of celestial objects due to their gravity. Therefore, the mean pairwise peculiar velocity of celestial objects, which quantifies their relative motion, is sensitive to both H0 and the dimensionless total matter density m. Based on this, using the Cosmicflows-4 data, we measured H0 for the first time via the galaxy pairwise velocity in the nonlinear and quasi-linear range. Our results yield H0=75.51.4 km s-1 Mpc-1 and m=0.311+0.029-0.028 . The uncertainties of H0 and m can be improved to around 0.6% and 2%, respectively, if the statistical errors become negligible in the future.
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