Emerging spatial curvature can resolve the tension between high-redshift CMB and low-redshift distance ladder measurements of the Hubble constant
Krzysztof Bolejko

TL;DR
This paper proposes that emerging spatial curvature from relativistic nonlinear evolution of cosmic structures can reconcile the Hubble constant tension between high-redshift CMB and low-redshift distance measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation approach showing how relativistic effects induce spatial curvature, affecting the inferred Hubble constant and resolving existing measurement tensions.
Findings
Simulations show emerging spatial curvature increases the local Hubble constant.
Relativistic nonlinear evolution explains the higher low-redshift Hubble measurements.
The model aligns low-redshift and high-redshift Hubble constant estimates.
Abstract
The measurements of the Hubble constant reveal a tension between high-redshift (CMB) and low-redshift (distance ladder) constraints. So far neither observational systematics nor new physics has been successfully implemented to explain this tension away. This paper present a new solution to the Hubble constant problem. The solution is based on the Simsilun simulation (relativistic simulation of the large scale structure of the Universe) with the ray-tracing algorithm implemented. The initial conditions for the Simsilun simulation were set up as perturbations around the CDM model. However, unlike in the Standard Cosmological Model (i.e. CDM model + perturbations), within the Simsilun simulation relativistic and nonlinear evolution of cosmic structures leads to the phenomenon of emerging spatial curvature, where the mean spatial curvature evolves from spatial flatness of…
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