Constraints on anisotropic cosmic expansion from supernovae
Benedict Bahr-Kalus, Dominik J. Schwarz, Marina Seikel, Alexander, Wiegand

TL;DR
This study investigates the isotropy of the Universe's expansion using supernova data, finding a small but statistically significant hemispherical anisotropy consistent with Lambda CDM model expectations.
Contribution
It provides a model-independent test of cosmic isotropy using supernovae, comparing hemispherical Hubble diagrams and analyzing systematic effects across different light curve fitters.
Findings
Observed hemispherical asymmetry Delta H/H 0.026
Expansion asymmetry direction aligns with previous studies
Anisotropy amplitude consistent with Lambda CDM expectations
Abstract
We test the isotropy of the expansion of the Universe by estimating the hemispherical anisotropy of supernova type Ia (SN Ia) Hubble diagrams at low redshifts (z<0.2). We compare the best fit Hubble diagrams in pairs of hemispheres and search for the maximal asymmetric orientation. For an isotropic Universe, we expect only a small asymmetry due to noise and the presence of nearby structures. This test does not depend on the assumed content of the Universe, the assumed model of gravity, or the spatial curvature of the Universe. The expectation for possible fluctuations due to large scale structure is evaluated for the \Lambda cold dark matter (\Lambda CDM) model and is compared to the supernova data from the Constitution set for four different light curve fitters, thus allowing a study of the systematic effects. The expected order of magnitude of the hemispherical asymmetry of the…
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