The Tension in the
Hubble Constant
The Big Bang and expanding universe theories
have hit a huge problem recently with two groups
deriving different values for the Hubble constant, H.
The λCDM model gives H = 67.4 +/- 0.5 km/s per
Mpc, whilst the supernovae groups give a value
of 73.2 +/- 1.3 km/s per Mpc. Clearly each one
rules the other out! This has lead to the scientific
community asking for New Physics, new particles
or even,,,, help!
Daily Mail. June 14th 2022
The problem is that the expanding universe model
is so entrenched in scientists minds that it corrupts
the data in that published distances to cosmological
objects are often ‘tweaked’ to take redshift into
account.
However, there is the NED-D compilation of redshift
independent distances that corrects this.
The list includes redshifts and actual distances to over
15,000 cosmological objects. Dipping into this
compilation for 2000 nearby objects where everyone
(including New Tired Light) agrees the graph is linear
gives:
The gradient is 2.17x10^-18 persecond of 66 km/s per
Mpc. Note that in an expanding universe ‘cv’ is
represented by a ‘velocity.’
In New Tired Light, the Hubble constant is given by
H=(2nhr/m) where ‘n’ is the mean electron number
density which is 0.5 per metre cubed, h is the planck
constant, r the classical electron radius and m, the rest
mass of the electron giving a value for H as 62.5 km/s
per Mpc - a difference of just 5%.
© lyndon ashmore May, 30th. 2022