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by Steve Watson
April 15, 2026
from
Modernity Website
Article also
HERE

"It
may point to new physics
beyond the
standard
cosmological model"...
New ultra-precise measurements have confirmed
the
Cosmos is
expanding faster than models based on the early universe predict,
while a separate study has dramatically shortened estimates of how
long the universe itself will last.
Astronomers have long observed a mismatch in the universe's
expansion rate depending on how it is measured.
Local observations of nearby galaxies point to a
faster rate, while data from the early universe, such as the cosmic
microwave background, suggest a slower pace.
This longstanding puzzle is known as
the Hubble
tension.
Video also
HERE...
A major international collaboration, the H0 Distance Network (H0DN),
has now
produced one of the most accurate local measurements yet.
The team combined decades of independent distance
measurements - including observations of red giant stars, Type Ia
supernovae, and different galaxy types - into a unified "Local
Distance Network."
Their result: the Hubble constant stands at 73.50
± 0.81 kilometers per second per megaparsec, with precision just
over 1 percent.
"This isn't just a new value of the Hubble
constant," the collaboration notes, "it's a community-built
framework that brings decades of independent distance
measurements together, transparently and accessibly."
The findings (The
Local Distance Network - A community consensus report on the
measurement of the Hubble constant at ~1% precision), published April 10, 2026, in
Astronomy & Astrophysics, strengthen the case that the discrepancy
is not due to a simple measurement error.
"This work effectively rules out explanations
of the Hubble tension that rely on a single overlooked error in
local distance measurements," the authors conclude.
"If the tension is real, as the growing body
of evidence suggests, it may point to new physics beyond the
standard cosmological model."
Dr Kathy Romer of the Dark Energy
Survey
commented,
"The universe is not only expanding, but it
is expanding faster and faster as time goes by." She added,
"What we'd expect is that the expansion would
get slower and slower as time goes by, because it has been
nearly 14 billion years since the Big Bang."
Dark Energy May Be Weakening
Separate research using the largest-ever 3D map of the universe from
the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) has produced
hints that
dark energy - the force accelerating cosmic expansion -
might not be constant but could be weakening over time.
The DESI team mapped nearly 15 million galaxies and quasars.
When combined with
cosmic microwave background
data and supernova observations, the results fit better with an
evolving dark energy model than the standard assumption of a fixed
force.
Dr Willem Elbers, a researcher from the Institute for
Computational Cosmology at Durham University, said:
"For decades, we have relied on a standard
model of the universe, but our new data suggests that dark
energy might be evolving over time.
If this is true, it will change everything we
thought we knew about the Cosmos."
Professor Will Percival, co-spokesperson
for DESI and an astronomer from the University of Waterloo, added:
"We're guided by
Occam's razor, and the
simplest explanation for what we see is shifting.
It's looking more and more like we may need
to modify our standard model of cosmology to make these
different datasets make sense together - and evolving dark
energy seems promising."
Dr Andrei Cuceu, a researcher at Berkeley
Lab who worked on the study, noted:
"We're in the business of letting the
universe tell us how it works, and maybe the universe is telling
us it's more complicated than we thought it was."
Paul Steinhardt, Director of the Princeton
Center for Theoretical Science, observed that if dark energy becomes
weak enough, scientists say the universe could be pulled together
into a
Big Crunch "remarkably quickly."
A related theoretical model led by physicist Henry Tye from
Cornell University and collaborators from China and Spain explores
one possible scenario.
Their calculations suggest the universe has a
total lifespan of about 33.3 billion years. With 13.8 billion years already passed, roughly
19.5 billion years would remain.
In this model, expansion continues
for another 11 billion years before slowing, stopping, and reversing
into collapse.
These independent lines of inquiry highlight ongoing gaps in our
understanding of the universe's expansion rate and the behavior of
dark energy.
Future observations from next-generation
telescopes are expected to test whether new physics is required to
reconcile the data...
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