Reassessing the Cepheid-based distance ladder: implications for the Hubble constant
Marcus H\"og{\aa}s, Edvard M\"ortsell

TL;DR
This study revisits Cepheid-based distance measurements to refine the Hubble constant, addressing biases in the period-luminosity relation, and finds a lower H0 value with reduced tension between measurement methods.
Contribution
It introduces two new strategies to account for Cepheid population differences, leading to a more conservative H0 estimate and a significant reduction in the Hubble tension.
Findings
H0 estimated at ~72.2 km/s/Mpc with increased uncertainty.
Hubble tension reduced from 5.4σ to 2.4σ using the resampling method.
Statistical evidence favors a broken period-luminosity relation over a single linear model.
Abstract
The Hubble constant () is a key parameter in cosmology, yet its precise value remains contentious due to discrepancies between early- and late-universe measurement methods, a problem known as the "Hubble tension." In this study, we revisit the Cepheid-based distance ladder calibration, focusing on two potential sources of bias in the period-luminosity relation (PLR): (1) the assumed prior for the residual parallax offset of the Milky Way (MW) Cepheids and (2) systematic differences between Cepheid periods in anchor galaxies versus supernova host galaxies. To address the latter, we adopt two different strategies alongside a renewed MW Cepheid calibration. The first strategy involves resampling anchor and host Cepheids from a common distribution of periods. This approach provides a conservative estimate of , including the renewed MW…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and Developments in Astronomy · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
