A Redetermination of the Hubble Constant with the Hubble Space Telescope from a Differential Distance Ladder
Adam G. Riess (JHU, STScI), Lucas Macri (Texas A&M), Stefano Casertano, (STScI), Megan Sosey (STScI), Hubert Lampeitl (UPort), Henry C. Ferguson, (STScI), Alexei V. Filippenko (UCB), Saurabh W. Jha (Rutgers), Weidong Li, (UCB), Ryan Chornock (UCB), and Devdeep Sarkar (UCI)

TL;DR
This paper refines the measurement of the Hubble constant using HST observations of Cepheids and Type Ia supernovae, significantly reducing uncertainties and aiding dark energy research.
Contribution
It introduces a homogeneous, instrument-consistent method for calibrating the Hubble constant, reducing systematic errors and improving precision over previous measurements.
Findings
H_0 measured as 74.2 +/- 3.6 km/s/Mpc
Improved dark energy equation-of-state constraint w = -1.12 +/- 0.12
Reduced systematic uncertainties in Cepheid-based distance measurements
Abstract
We report observations of 240 Cepheid variables obtained with the Near Infrared Camera (NICMOS) through the F160W filter on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The Cepheids are distributed across six recent hosts of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) and the "maser galaxy" NGC 4258, allowing us to directly calibrate the peak luminosities of the SNe Ia from the precise, geometric distance measurements provided by the masers. New features of our measurement include the use of the same instrument for all Cepheid measurements across the distance ladder and homogeneity of the Cepheid periods and metallicities thus necessitating only a differential measurement of Cepheid fluxes and reducing the largest systematic uncertainties in the determination of the fiducial SN Ia luminosity. The NICMOS measurements reduce differential extinction in the host galaxies by a factor of 5 over past optical data.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Advanced Mathematical Theories
