Trending...
- Grads aren't getting hired — here's what we're doing about it
- New Book Warring From the Standpoint of the Throne Room Calls Believers to Pray From Victory
- Introducing Modern Integrated Warfare for Defense, Intelligence, and National Security
A newly published analysis proposes that the famous "Hubble tension" likely stems from an inference bias, occurring when standard General Relativity is applied to gravitational wave data that actually follows modified propagation.
HONOLULU - Virginir -- The long-standing "Hubble tension"—a discrepancy between early-universe measurements of cosmic expansion and late-universe distance measurements—remains one of modern cosmology's most debated puzzles. While the discrepancy is often interpreted as evidence for new physics in the universe's expansion history, a new study proposes a different possibility: part of the tension may arise from how distances are inferred.
In a recent implications analysis, independent researcher Aiden B. Smith examines whether gravitational-wave distance measurements—specifically from so-called "dark sirens"—could be subtly affected by assumptions about how gravitational waves propagate across cosmological distances.
More on virginir.com
Dark sirens are gravitational-wave events without confirmed electromagnetic counterparts. Their distances are inferred statistically using galaxy catalogues. Smith's analysis uses his previously identified propagation anomaly in the GWTC-3 dataset as a template and asks: if gravitational-wave amplitudes decay slightly differently than predicted by General Relativity, what effect would that have on cosmological inference?
The study finds that, under this hypothesis, applying standard General Relativity during distance compression can induce a shift in the inferred Hubble constant of approximately +2 to +5 km/s/Mpc—comparable in scale to the observed tension.
Importantly, the paper does not claim to resolve the Hubble tension. Instead, it demonstrates that gravitational-wave propagation assumptions are not mathematically neutral: if even modest deviations are present, they can bias late-time inferences.
The modified-propagation preference identified in the GWTC-3 dark-siren sample has been subjected to internal calibration and stress testing, including injection-based null simulations and robustness checks against selection and catalog perturbations. While the signal remains statistically unusual within the tested framework, confirming its physical origin will require independent replication and larger gravitational-wave samples from future observing runs.
More on virginir.com
If confirmed, the results would suggest that part of the Hubble tension may reflect a subtle distance-inference effect rather than a fundamental breakdown of the expansion model itself. If not, the analysis provides a quantitative diagnostic of where dark-siren cosmology may be vulnerable to systematic effects.
The full study and reproducibility materials are publicly available.
Data and Study Availability: While the work is currently in peer review, the full study is available to read on Smith's research journal at quasardipolephenomenon.org. All code and reproducibility artifacts associated with this analysis can be downloaded via Zenodo (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18635659) or accessed on GitHub.
In a recent implications analysis, independent researcher Aiden B. Smith examines whether gravitational-wave distance measurements—specifically from so-called "dark sirens"—could be subtly affected by assumptions about how gravitational waves propagate across cosmological distances.
More on virginir.com
- AktieGo Publishes Editorial Feature Examining Decentralized Power Infrastructure and Hydrogen Energy Deployment
- Greg Wier Announces the Release of More Than Just Luck
- Nieuwe standaard in webdesign: Professionele website laten maken voor het MKB vanaf €249 door Websitepioniers
- Shipping Containers Are Powering the Next Generation of Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure
- Water Damage Restoration Alexandria VA
Dark sirens are gravitational-wave events without confirmed electromagnetic counterparts. Their distances are inferred statistically using galaxy catalogues. Smith's analysis uses his previously identified propagation anomaly in the GWTC-3 dataset as a template and asks: if gravitational-wave amplitudes decay slightly differently than predicted by General Relativity, what effect would that have on cosmological inference?
The study finds that, under this hypothesis, applying standard General Relativity during distance compression can induce a shift in the inferred Hubble constant of approximately +2 to +5 km/s/Mpc—comparable in scale to the observed tension.
Importantly, the paper does not claim to resolve the Hubble tension. Instead, it demonstrates that gravitational-wave propagation assumptions are not mathematically neutral: if even modest deviations are present, they can bias late-time inferences.
The modified-propagation preference identified in the GWTC-3 dark-siren sample has been subjected to internal calibration and stress testing, including injection-based null simulations and robustness checks against selection and catalog perturbations. While the signal remains statistically unusual within the tested framework, confirming its physical origin will require independent replication and larger gravitational-wave samples from future observing runs.
More on virginir.com
- Hypnotherapy Finder Announces Official US Wide Launch After Successful Soft Launch
- Melzi Job Coach Launches on iOS and Android: A Privacy-First AI Career Engine Built for Execution
- Training Lofts Launches $1,099 Unlimited Training Membership Featuring Semi-Private Coaching, Nutrition Support, and Recovery Services
- Ford's Colony Country Club Announces Leadership Promotions
- "Moebius Syndrome: A History of a Rare Condition" Explores Medical History
If confirmed, the results would suggest that part of the Hubble tension may reflect a subtle distance-inference effect rather than a fundamental breakdown of the expansion model itself. If not, the analysis provides a quantitative diagnostic of where dark-siren cosmology may be vulnerable to systematic effects.
The full study and reproducibility materials are publicly available.
Data and Study Availability: While the work is currently in peer review, the full study is available to read on Smith's research journal at quasardipolephenomenon.org. All code and reproducibility artifacts associated with this analysis can be downloaded via Zenodo (DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18635659) or accessed on GitHub.
Source: Aiden Blake Smith
0 Comments
Latest on virginir.com
- Grads aren't getting hired — here's what we're doing about it
- V²M The Veteran Magazine Launches Third Edition Honoring Women's History Month
- K2 Integrity Enhances Technology Capabilities Through Acquisition of Leviathan Security Group
- #WeAreGreekWarriors Comes to Detroit in Celebration of Women's History Month
- Energywise Solutions and Pickleball Pros Partner to Bring More Energy and Visibility to Pickleball Clubs
- Buildout Launches CRM, Completing the Industry's First AI-Powered End-to-End Deal Engine for CRE
- The Franchise King® Releases Free Guide for Nervous Buyers
- Kanguro Insurance Taps Paylode to Launch Best-in-Class Pet and Renters Insurance Rewards Experience
- CCHR: CIA Mind-Control Files Raise Urgent Questions as Millions Take Psychotropic Drugs
- NRx Pharmaceuticals Launches Breakthrough One-Day Treatment Clinic in Florida as FDA Pathway and Clinical Data Strengthen Growth Outlook; $NRXP
- Revenue Optics Launches Talent Infrastructure Platform for SaaS Revenue Hiring and Appoints Sabz Kaur to Lead Growth
- Building a Multi-Domain Autonomous Systems Platform at the Intersection of AI, Defense and Infrastructure: VisionWave Holdings (N A S D A Q: VWAV)
- Bent Danholm Named "Top Luxury Real Estate Leader" in Modern Luxury Miami
- Author Ken Mora to Celebrate New Caravaggio Book Debut with Special Event at Palazzo Venezia Naples
- Generic Theater Presents POTUS by Selina Fillinger
- Matthew Sisneros Releases Raw and Unfiltered Memoir: The Devil Lost Another One — A Powerful Story of Crime, Consequence, and Redemption
- From Life to Light: Jess L. Martinez Shares a Soulful Poetry Collection That Explores What It Means to Be Human
- Lawsuit Filed Against Boeing Over Defective Seat Switch on Boeing 787
- Quadcode Acquires Significant Stake in Game 7, LLC - The Parent Company for FPFX Tech and PropAccount.com
- Danholm Collection Announces Sale of 16689 Broadwater Ave in Winter Garden, Highlighting Strong Performance in Twinwaters Community

