The expansion field: The value of H_0
G.A. Tammann (1), A. Sandage (2), B. Reindl (1) ((1) Department of, Physics, Astronomy Basel, (2) Obs. Carnegie Inst. Washington)

TL;DR
This paper derives a precise value of the Hubble constant H_0 by analyzing galaxy distances using multiple independent methods, confirming the linear expansion of the universe and estimating H_0 as approximately 62.3 km/s/Mpc.
Contribution
It provides a new, robust measurement of H_0 using a large set of galaxy distances calibrated with TRGB, Cepheids, and SNe Ia, supporting the linearity of the expansion field.
Findings
H_0 = 62.3 +/- 1.3 km/s/Mpc
Linear expansion confirmed up to 20,000 km/s
Distance scale zero points are critical for accuracy
Abstract
Any calibration of the present value of the Hubble constant requires recession velocities and distances of galaxies. While the conversion of observed velocities into true recession velocities has only a small effect on the result, the derivation of unbiased distances which rest on a solid zero point and cover a useful range of about 4-30 Mpc is crucial. A list of 279 such galaxy distances within v<2000 km/s is given which are derived from the tip of the red-giant branch (TRGB), from Cepheids, and from supernovae of type Ia (SNe Ia). Their random errors are not more than 0.15 mag as shown by intercomparison. They trace a linear expansion field within narrow margins from v=250 to at least 2000 km/s. Additional 62 distant SNe Ia confirm the linearity to at least 20,000 km/s. The dispersion about the Hubble line is dominated by random peculiar velocities, amounting locally to <100 km/s but…
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