Possible Resolution of the Hubble Tension with Weyl Invariant Gravity
Meir Shimon

TL;DR
This paper proposes a Weyl invariant gravity model that modifies cosmological kinematics, potentially resolving the Hubble tension by allowing an earlier recombination and significantly reducing the discrepancy between local and CMB-inferred Hubble constant measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a Weyl invariant gravitational framework that alters test particle kinematics and distance scales, providing a novel approach to alleviate the Hubble tension.
Findings
The model significantly reduces the Hubble tension to about 1.3-1.5 sigma.
Data strongly favor non-zero Weyl scale parameter over standard cosmology.
The model's parameters imply a fundamental symmetry in gravity could explain the Hubble tension.
Abstract
We explore cosmological implications of a genuinely Weyl invariant (WI) gravitational interaction. The latter reduces to general relativity in a particular conformal frame for which the gravitational coupling and active gravitational masses are fixed. Specifically, we consider a cosmological model in this framework that is {\it dynamically} identical to the standard model (SM) of cosmology. However, {\it kinematics} of test particles traveling in the new background metric is modified thanks to a new (cosmological) fundamental mass scale, , of the model. Since the lapse-function of the new metric is radially-dependent any incoming photon experiences (gravitational) red/blueshift in the {\it comoving} frame, unlike in the SM. Distance scales are modified as well due to the scale . The claimed tension level between the locally measured Hubble constant, ,…
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