Physics World 07月22日 00:14
A cosmic void may help resolve the Hubble tension
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一项新研究提出,我们银河系周围一个低密度区域(即宇宙空洞)可能解释了现代宇宙学中最令人困惑的矛盾之一——哈勃张力。哈勃张力源于对宇宙膨胀速率测量的冲突,本地测量值比早期宇宙数据预测值高出约8%。该研究认为,如果我们的星系位于一个密度比平均值低约20%的区域,那么这种差异可以通过引力效应来解释,使得本地观测到的膨胀速率显得更快。研究人员通过将该空洞模型与重子声学振荡(BAO)观测数据进行对比,发现空洞模型比标准宇宙学模型更能解释现有数据,其可能性高出约一亿倍。虽然该模型前景光明,但仍需更多观测数据来进一步验证。

🔭 **哈勃张力与宇宙膨胀速率的矛盾:** 现代宇宙学面临一个重大难题,即通过观测早期宇宙(如宇宙微波背景辐射)和本地宇宙(如超新星、星系)得出的宇宙膨胀速率测量值存在显著差异,本地测量值比早期宇宙数据预测值高出约8%,远超测量不确定性。

🌌 **宇宙空洞假说:** 一项新研究提出,我们所在的本地宇宙区域可能是一个低密度区域(宇宙空洞),密度比宇宙平均值低约20%,范围可达十亿光年。这种低密度环境能够解释本地测量值为何高于预期。

🌠 **空洞对测量的影响机制:** 在低密度区域,星系受周围较密集区域的引力吸引向外运动,这种运动叠加在宇宙整体膨胀造成的红移上,使得本地观测到的膨胀速率看起来更快。该空洞的形成可能源于早期宇宙的量子密度涨落。

📊 **BAO观测验证空洞模型:** 研究人员使用重子声学振荡(BAO)——早期宇宙声波留下的宇宙大尺度结构中的涟漪——作为“标准尺”来检验空洞模型。BAO数据表明,该空洞模型比不包含本地空洞的标准宇宙学模型有统计学上高出约一亿倍的可能性。

🚀 **未来验证与研究方向:** 尽管空洞模型前景广阔,但仍需更多数据支持。未来研究将侧重于更短距离的BAO观测、测量星系速度以及改进星系数量统计。同时,研究人员也在分析超新星数据,以探究哈勃张力是否在更远的宇宙距离上消失,从而进一步验证或修正模型。

A large, low density region of space surrounding the Milky Way may explain one of the most puzzling discrepancies in modern cosmology. Known as the Hubble tension, the issue arises from conflicting measurements of how fast the universe is expanding. Now, a new study suggests that the presence of a local cosmic void could explain this mismatch, and significantly improves agreement with observations compared to the Standard Model of cosmology.

“Numerically, the local measurements of the expansion rate are 8% higher than expected from the early universe, which amounts to over six times the measurement uncertainty,” says Indranil Banik, a cosmologist at the University of Portsmouth and a collaborator on the study. “It is by far the most serious issue facing cosmology.”

The Hubble constant describes how fast the universe is expanding and it can be estimated in two main ways. One method involves looking far into the past by observing the cosmic microwave background (CMB). This is radiation that was created shortly after the Big Bang and permeates the universe to this day. The other method relies on the observation of relatively nearby objects, such as supernovae and galaxies, to measure how fast space is expanding in our own cosmic neighbourhood.

If the Standard Model of cosmology is correct, these two approaches should yield the same result. But, they do not. Instead, local measurements suggest the universe is expanding faster than the expansion given by early-universe data. Furthermore, this disagreement is too large to dismiss as experimental error.

Local skewing

One possible explanation is that something about our local environment is skewing the results. “The idea is that we are in a region of the universe that is about 20% less dense than average out to a distance of about one billion light years,” Banik explains. “There is actually a lot of evidence for a local void from number counts of various kinds of sources across nearly the whole electromagnetic spectrum, from radio to X-rays.”

Such a void would subtly affect how we interpret the redshifts of galaxies. This is the stretching of the wavelength of galactic light that reveals how quickly a galaxy is receding from us. In an underdense (of relatively low density) region, galaxies are effectively pulled outward by the gravity of surrounding denser areas. This motion adds to the redshift caused by the universe’s overall expansion, making the local expansion rate appear faster than it actually is.

“The origin of such a [void] would trace back to a modest underdensity in the early universe, believed to have arisen from quantum fluctuations in density when the universe was extremely young and dense,” says Banik. However, he adds, “A void as large and deep as observed is not consistent with the standard cosmological model. You would need structure to grow faster than it predicts on scales larger than about one hundred million light–years”.

Testing the theory

To evaluate whether the void model holds up against data, Banik and his collaborator Vasileios Kalaitzidis at the UK’s University of St Andrews compared it with one of cosmology’s most precise measurement tools: baryon acoustic oscillations (BAOs). These are subtle ripples in the distribution of galaxies that were created by sound waves in the early universe and then frozen into the large-scale structure of space as it cooled.

Because these ripples provide a characteristic distance scale, they can be used as a “standard ruler” to track how the universe has expanded over time. By comparing the apparent size of this ruler at observed a different distances, cosmologists can map the universe’s expansion history. Crucially, if our galaxy lies inside a void, that would alter how the ruler appears locally, in a way that can be tested.

The researchers compared the predictions of their model with twenty years of BAO observations, and the results are striking. “BAO observations over the last twenty years show the void model is about one hundred million times more likely than the Standard Model of cosmology without any local void,” says Banik. “Importantly, the parameters of all these models were fixed without considering BAO data, so we were really just testing the predictions of each model.”

What lies ahead

While the void model appears promising, Banik says that more data are needed. “Additional BAO observations at relatively short distances would help a lot because that is where a local void would have the greatest impact.” Other promising avenues include measuring galaxy velocities and refining galaxy number counts. “I would suggest that it can be essentially confirmed in the next five to ten years, since we are talking about the nearby universe after all.”

Banik is also analysing supernovae data to explore whether the Hubble tension disappears at greater distances. “We are testing if the Hubble tension vanishes in the high-redshift or more distant universe, since a local void would not have much effect that far out,” he says.

Despite the challenges, Banik remains optimistic. With improved surveys and more refined models, cosmologists may be closing in on a solution to the Hubble tension.

The research is described in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

The post A cosmic void may help resolve the Hubble tension appeared first on Physics World.

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哈勃张力 宇宙空洞 宇宙膨胀 宇宙学 BAO
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