24–26 May 2021
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

The Hubble Constant in the Axi-Higgs Universe

24 May 2021, 18:30
15m
Cosmology Cosmology II

Speaker

Hoang Nhan LUU (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)

Description

The $\Lambda$CDM model provides an excellent fit to the CMB data. However, a statistically significant tension emerges when its determination of the Hubble constant $H_0$ is compared to the local distance-redshift measurements. The axi-Higgs model, which couples ultralight axions to the Higgs field, offers a specific variation of the $\Lambda$CDM model. It relaxes the $H_0$ tension as well as explains the $^7$Li puzzle in Big-Bang nucleosynthesis, the $S_8$ tension with the weak-lensing data, and the observed isotropic cosmic birefringence in CMB. In this letter, we demonstrate how the $H_0$ and $S_8$ tensions can be resolved simultaneously, by correlating the axion impacts on the early and late universe. In a benchmark scenario selected for experimental tests soon, the analysis combining the CMB+BAO+WL+SN data yields $H_0 = 71.1 \pm 1.1$ km/s/Mpc and $S_8 = 0.766 \pm 0.011$. Combining this (excluding the SN(supernovae) part) with the local distance-redshift measurements yields $H_0 = 72.3 \pm 0.7$ km/s/Mpc, while $S_8$ is unchanged.

Primary authors

Hoang Nhan LUU (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) Dr Lingfeng LI (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) Prof. S.-H. Henry TYE (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) Prof. Tao LIU (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) WH Leo FUNG (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) Yu-Cheng QIU (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology)

Presentation materials