Lensing amplitude anomaly and varying electron mass alleviate the Hubble and $S_8$ tensions
Yi-Ying Wang, Lei Lei, Shao-Peng Tang, and Yi-Zhong Fan

TL;DR
This study investigates whether varying the electron mass, spatial curvature, and lensing amplitude can resolve the Hubble and $S_8$ tensions in cosmology, finding some indications of electron mass variation and persistent lensing anomalies.
Contribution
It introduces a combined analysis of electron mass variation, spatial curvature, and lensing amplitude to address cosmological tensions using recent observational data.
Findings
Electron mass variation may help alleviate the $S_8$ tension.
No significant deviation from flat spatial curvature was found.
Lensing amplitude remains anomalously high across analyses.
Abstract
Cosmological measurements have revealed tensions within the standard CDM model, notably discrepancies in the Hubble constant and parameter. A modified recombination scenario involving a time-varying electron mass has been proposed as a feasible solution to the Hubble tension without exacerbating the tension. Recent observations have further revealed other potential deviations from the CDM framework, such as non-flat spatial curvature and an anomalous CMB lensing amplitude. In this study, we explore whether introducing a variation in the electron mass , allowing non-zero spatial curvature , and a free lensing amplitude can resolve these persistent tensions. Using the Planck Public Release (PR) 3 and ACT power spectra, Planck PR4 and ACT lensing maps, together with BAO measurements from DESI DR2, we obtain $H_0 =…
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