Hubble flow variance and the cosmic rest frame
David L. Wiltshire, Peter R. Smale, Teppo Mattsson, Richard Watkins

TL;DR
This study analyzes the variance of the Hubble flow using a large galaxy sample, revealing non-kinematic anisotropies that challenge standard interpretations of cosmic motion and may impact cosmological measurements.
Contribution
It provides evidence that the Hubble flow's anisotropy is better explained by foreground non-kinematic effects rather than local boosts, suggesting a reinterpretation of bulk flows.
Findings
Hubble constant is closer to its asymptotic value in the LG rest frame.
Detected a dipole structure in the Hubble flow with scale-dependent amplitude.
Angular Hubble flow variation correlates strongly with residual CMB temperature dipole.
Abstract
We characterize the radial and angular variance of the Hubble flow in the COMPOSITE sample of 4534 galaxies, on scales in which much of the flow is in the nonlinear regime. With no cosmological assumptions other than the existence of a suitably averaged linear Hubble law, we find with decisive Bayesian evidence (ln B >> 5) that the Hubble constant averaged in independent spherical radial shells is closer to its asymptotic value when referred to the rest frame of the Local Group, rather than the standard rest frame of the Cosmic Microwave Background. An exception occurs for radial shells in the range 40/h-60/h Mpc. Angular averages reveal a dipole structure in the Hubble flow, whose amplitude changes markedly over the range 32/h-62/h Mpc. Whereas the LG frame dipole is initially constant and then decreases significantly, the CMB frame dipole initially decreases but then increases. The…
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