A 2.4% Determination of the Local Value of the Hubble Constant
Adam G. Riess, Lucas M. Macri, Samantha L. Hoffmann, Dan Scolnic,, Stefano Casertano, Alexei V. Filippenko, Brad E. Tucker, Mark J. Reid, David, O. Jones, Jeffrey M. Silverman, Ryan Chornock, Peter Challis, Wenlong Yuan,, Peter J. Brown, Ryan J. Foley

TL;DR
This paper refines the local measurement of the Hubble constant to 2.4% uncertainty using new HST observations of Cepheids and other geometric distance calibrations, highlighting a tension with CMB-based predictions.
Contribution
It provides a more precise local H_0 value by combining multiple geometric distance calibrations and reducing systematic uncertainties, advancing the accuracy of cosmic expansion measurements.
Findings
H_0 measured as 73.24+/-1.74 km/sec/Mpc
H_0 is 3.4 sigma higher than Planck predictions
Systematic uncertainties in CMB measurements may explain the tension
Abstract
We use the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to reduce the uncertainty in the local value of the Hubble constant (H_0) from 3.3% to 2.4%. Improvements come from new, near-infrared observations of Cepheid variables in 11 new hosts of recent SNe~Ia, more than doubling the sample of SNe~Ia having a Cepheid-calibrated distance for a total of 19; these leverage the magnitude-z relation based on 300 SNe~Ia at z<0.15. All 19 hosts and the megamaser system NGC4258 were observed with WFC3, thus nullifying cross-instrument zeropoint errors. Other improvements include a 33% reduction in the systematic uncertainty in the maser distance to NGC4258, more Cepheids and a more robust distance to the LMC from late-type DEBs, HST observations of Cepheids in M31, and new HST-based trigonometric parallaxes for Milky Way (MW) Cepheids. We consider four geometric distance…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
