Do supernovae indicate an accelerating universe?
Roya Mohayaee (IAP Paris), Mohamed Rameez (TIFR Mumbai), Subir, Sarkar (Oxford)

TL;DR
This paper questions the evidence for an accelerating universe derived from supernova data, suggesting that local inhomogeneities and anisotropies may bias the interpretation of cosmic acceleration.
Contribution
It challenges the standard interpretation of supernova data as evidence for dark energy by highlighting the effects of local inhomogeneity and anisotropy on cosmological measurements.
Findings
Local bulk flow inconsistent with ΛCDM predictions
Observed dipole in high-redshift quasars rejects kinematic interpretation
Anisotropy in acceleration aligns with bulk flow direction
Abstract
In the late 1990's, observations of 93 Type Ia supernovae were analysed in the framework of the FLRW cosmology assuming these to be `standard(isable) candles'. It was thus inferred that the Hubble expansion rate is accelerating as if driven by a positive Cosmological Constant . This is still the only direct evidence for the `dark energy' that is the dominant component of the standard CDM cosmological model. Other data such as BAO, CMB anisotropies, stellar ages, the rate of structure growth, etc are all `concordant' with this model but do not provide independent evidence for accelerated expansion. Analysis of a larger sample of 740 SNe Ia shows that these are not quite standard candles, and highlights the "corrections" applied to analyse the data in the FLRW framework. The latter holds in the reference frame in which the CMB is isotropic, whereas observations are made…
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