In an epic cosmology clash, rival scientists begin to find common ground 

In an epic cosmology clash, rival scientists begin to find common ground 




The biggest clash in cosmology might be inching closer to resolution, thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope. 
New papers published by two of the central players are raising hopes that additional observations from the James Webb Space Telescope, or JWST, of certain types of stars and supernovas could solve the question of whether the discord is real, once and for all.
The two teams disagree about whether that tension exists at all. One team says there’s no strong evidence for the Hubble tension from the JWST data. But the other group says the JWST data strengthen the case that the two types of measurements are in conflict. “I’m even more intrigued by the Hubble tension,” says cosmologist Adam Riess of Johns Hopkins University, leader of one of the teams.
The different camps are finally seeing eye to eye on one piece of their measurements: distances to nearby galaxies, which are necessary to deduce the expansion rate of the universe from supernovas. “This is really new — we’re agreeing on distances, and that’s real progress,” says cosmologist Wendy Freedman of the University of Chicago, who leads the other team.

2024-09-04 12:00:00
Original from www.sciencenews.org

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