A tale of two (or more) $h$'s
Samuel Brieden, H\'ector Gil-Mar\'in, Licia Verde

TL;DR
This paper compares two independent large-scale structure methods for measuring the Hubble constant, finding consistent results within the standard cosmological model, and discusses implications for resolving the Hubble tension.
Contribution
It provides the tightest sound-horizon free $H_0$ constraints from large-scale structure data and analyzes their implications for cosmological model extensions addressing the Hubble tension.
Findings
Both methods yield consistent $H_0$ values within $ m ext{Lambda CDM}$.
The constraints are the tightest to date from large-scale structure data.
Any model addressing the Hubble tension must modify both the sound horizon and matter-radiation equality scales.
Abstract
We use the large-scale structure galaxy data (LSS) from the BOSS and eBOSS surveys, in combination with abundances information from Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) to measure two values of the Hubble expansion rate, , each of them based on very different physical processes. One is a (traditional) late-time-background measurement based on determining the BAO scale and using BBN abundances on baryons for calibrating its absolute size (BAO+BBN). This method anchors to the (standard) physics of the sound horizon scale at pre-recombination times. The other is a newer early-time based measurement associated with the broadband shape of the power spectrum. This second method anchors to the physics of the matter-radiation equality scale, which also needs BBN information for determining the suppression of baryons in the power…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
