A variation on the theory of quantum gravity — the unification of quantum mechanics and Einstein’s general relativity — could help solve one of the biggest puzzles in cosmology, new research suggests.
For nearly a century, scientists have known that the universe is expanding. But in recent decades, physicists have found that different types of measurements of the expansion rate — called the Hubble parameter — produce puzzling inconsistencies.
To resolve this paradox, a new study suggests incorporating quantum effects into one prominent theory used to determine the expansion rate.
“We tried to resolve and explain the mismatch between the values of the Hubble parameter from two different prominent types of observations,” study co-author P.K. Suresh, a professor of physics at the University of Hyderabad in India, told Live Science via email.
An expanding problem
The universe’s expansion was first identified by Edwin Hubble in 1929. His observations with the largest telescope of that time revealed that galaxies farther from us appear to move away at faster speeds. Although Hubble initially overestimated the expansion rate, subsequent measurements have refined our understanding, establishing the current Hubble parameter as highly reliable.
Later in the 20th century, astrophysicists introduced a novel technique to gauge the expansion rate by examining the cosmic microwave background, the pervasive “afterglow” of the Big Bang.
However, a serious problem arose with these two types of measurements. Specifically, the newer method produced a Hubble parameter value almost 10% lower than the one deduced from the astronomical observations of distant cosmic objects. Such discrepancies between different measurements, called the Hubble tension, signal potential flaws in our understanding of the universe’s evolution.
In a study published in the journal Classical and Quantum Gravity, Suresh and his colleague from the University of Hyderabad, B. Anupama, proposed a solution to align these disparate results. They underscored that physicists infer the Hubble parameter indirectly, employing our universe’s evolutionary model based on Einstein’s theory of general relativity.