Cosmos expansion too fast?

Cosmos expansion too fast?

A Story by neurostar burns

A report made recent in late April 2019 tells of the cosmos expanding even faster than thought before, according to the findings of the team lead by Adam Reiss. The paper was released late March 2019. A report released by John Hopkins University and also to Space.com
Reiss' team measured the Hubble constant against the Large Magellanic Cloud Cepheids for calculating expansion rate. With disparity of uncertainty reduced to 1.9 %, or 1/100,000, they found the universe is expanding 9%, faster than before thought since the universe's inception. The Hubble Constant expansion measured by Reiss' team is 74.03 kilometers per second per megaparsec, the Planck observatory had earlier come up with 67.4
Noted, there is nothing known beyond its frontier that would stop the universe from expanding. Yet, there might be some thing that pulls the galaxies along one direction which may or not be within the cosmos, tabbed dark flow.
Pursuits of other values questions should be forthcoming for measuring impacts of data gathered for related assessments.
Would this article indicate also other reported tendencies toward cosmic "rips" by faster expansion?

© 2019 neurostar burns


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Added on April 27, 2019
Last Updated on November 10, 2019

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neurostar burns
neurostar burns

Phoenix



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Avid hot tea drinker, likes seafood and asian eateries and home cooked food including east asian, trail hikes, lecturing, being single, cosmology, sky watching, open natural vistas. more..

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