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Distant foreground and the Planck-derived Hubble constant

Published: 03/2020
Distant foreground and the Planck-derived Hubble constant
Theoretical (solid curves) and observed (points with error bars) slopes of the regression characterizing the relationship between TSN and zSN for different Planck frequency bands. The slopes are normalized to the slope magnitude for the High Frequency Instrument (HFI) 100 GHz band.

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 492, Issue 4, p.5052-5056

Yershov V. N., Raikov A. A., Lovyagin N. Yu, Kuin N. P. M., Popova E. A.

It is possible to reduce the discrepancy between the local measurement of the cosmological parameter H0 and the value derived from the Planck measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) by considering contamination of the CMB by emission from some medium around distant extragalactic sources, such as extremely cold coarse-grain dust. Though being distant, such a medium would still be in the foreground with respect to the CMB, and, as any other foreground, it would alter the CMB power spectrum. This could contribute to the dispersion of CMB temperature fluctuations. By generating a few random samples of CMB with different dispersions, we have checked that the increased dispersion leads to a smaller estimated value of H0, the rest of the cosmological model parameters remaining fixed. This might explain the reduced value of the Planck-derived parameter H0 with respect to the local measurements. The signature of the distant foreground in the CMB traced by supernovae (SNe) was previously reported by the authors of this paper - we found a correlation between the SN redshifts, zSN, and CMB temperature fluctuations at the SNe locations, TSN. Here we have used the slopes of the regression lines T_SN / z_SN corresponding to different Planck wavebands in order to estimate the possible temperature of the distant extragalactic medium, which turns out to be very low, about 5 K. The most likely ingredient of this medium is coarse-grain (grey) dust, which is known to be almost undetectable, except for the effect of dimming remote extragalactic sources. Original →
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