Hubble's law, also known as the Hubble–Lemaître law, is the observation in physical cosmology that galaxies are moving away from Earth at speeds proportional to their distance. In other words, the farther a galaxy is from the Earth, the faster it moves away. A galaxy's recessional velocity is typically determined by measuring its redshift, a shift in the frequency of light emitted by the galaxy.
The discovery of Hubble's law is attributed to work published by Edwin Hubble in 1929, but the notion of the universe expanding at a calculable rate was first derived from general relativity equations in 1922 by Alexander Friedmann. The Friedmann equations showed the universe might be expanding, and presented the expansion speed if that were the case.. (English translation in ) Before Hubble, astronomer Carl Wilhelm Wirtz had, in 1922 and 1924, deduced with his own data that galaxies that appeared smaller and dimmer had larger redshifts and thus that more distant galaxies recede faster from the observer. In 1927, Georges Lemaître concluded that the universe might be expanding by noting the proportionality of the recessional velocity of distant bodies to their respective distances. He estimated a value for this ratio, which—after Hubble confirmed cosmic expansion and determined a more precise value for it two years later—became known as the Hubble constant. Partially translated to English in Hubble inferred the recession velocity of the objects from their , many of which were earlier measured and related to velocity by Vesto Slipher in 1917. Combining Slipher's velocities with Henrietta Swan Leavitt's intergalactic distance calculations and methodology allowed Hubble to better calculate an expansion rate for the universe.
Hubble's law is considered the first observational basis for the expansion of the universe, and is one of the pieces of evidence most often cited in support of the Big Bang model. The motion of astronomical objects due solely to this expansion is known as the Hubble flow. It is described by the equation , with the constant of proportionality—the Hubble constant—between the "proper distance" to a galaxy (which can change over time, unlike the comoving distance) and its speed of separation , i.e. the derivative of proper distance with respect to the cosmic time coordinate. Though the Hubble constant is constant at any given moment in time, the Hubble parameter , of which the Hubble constant is the current value, varies with time, so the term constant is sometimes thought of as somewhat of a misnomer.
The Hubble constant is most frequently quoted in kilometre/second/Mpc, which gives the speed of a galaxy away as . Simplifying the units of the generalized form reveals that specifies a frequency (SI unit: Hertz), leading the reciprocal of to be known as the Hubble time (14.4 billion years). The Hubble constant can also be stated as a relative rate of expansion. In this form = 7%/Gyr, meaning that, at the current rate of expansion, it takes one billion years for an unbound structure to grow by 7%.
Combining his measurements of galaxy distances with Vesto Slipher and Milton Humason's measurements of the redshifts associated with the galaxies, Hubble discovered a rough proportionality between redshift of an object and its distance. Though there was considerable variance (now known to be caused by peculiar velocities—the 'Hubble flow' is used to refer to the region of space far enough out that the recession velocity is larger than local peculiar velocities), Hubble was able to plot a trend line from the 46 galaxies he studied and obtain a value for the Hubble constant of 500 (km/s)/Mpc (much higher than the currently accepted value due to errors in his distance calibrations; see cosmic distance ladder for details).
In 1931, Einstein went to Mount Wilson Observatory to thank Hubble for providing the observational basis for modern cosmology.
The cosmological constant has regained attention in recent decades as a hypothetical explanation for dark energy.
where
Hubble's law is considered a fundamental relation between recessional velocity and distance. However, the relation between recessional velocity and redshift depends on the cosmological model adopted and is not established except for small redshifts.
For distances larger than the radius of the Hubble sphere , objects recede at a rate faster than the speed of light ( See Uses of the proper distance for a discussion of the significance of this):
Since the Hubble "constant" is a constant only in space, not in time, the radius of the Hubble sphere may increase or decrease over various time intervals. The subscript '0' indicates the value of the Hubble constant today. Current evidence suggests that the expansion of the universe is accelerating ( see Accelerating universe), meaning that for any given galaxy, the recession velocity is increasing over time as the galaxy moves to greater and greater distances; however, the Hubble parameter is actually thought to be decreasing with time, meaning that if we were to look at some distance and watch a series of different galaxies pass that distance, later galaxies would pass that distance at a smaller velocity than earlier ones.
is used. That is, there is between redshift velocity and redshift: they are rigidly proportional, and not related by any theoretical reasoning. The motivation behind the "redshift velocity" terminology is that the redshift velocity agrees with the velocity from a low-velocity simplification of the so-called Fizeau–Doppler formula
Here, , are the observed and emitted wavelengths respectively. The "redshift velocity" is not so simply related to real velocity at larger velocities, however, and this terminology leads to confusion if interpreted as a real velocity. Next, the connection between redshift or redshift velocity and recessional velocity is discussed.
where is some reference time.Matts Roos, Introduction to Cosmology If light is emitted from a galaxy at time and received by us at , it is redshifted due to the expansion of the universe, and this redshift is simply:
Suppose a galaxy is at distance , and this distance changes with time at a rate . We call this rate of recession the "recession velocity" :
We now define the Hubble constant as
and discover the Hubble law:
From this perspective, Hubble's law is a fundamental relation between (i) the recessional velocity associated with the expansion of the universe and (ii) the distance to an object; the connection between redshift and distance is a crutch used to connect Hubble's law with observations. This law can be related to redshift approximately by making a Taylor series expansion:
If the distance is not too large, all other complications of the model become small corrections, and the time interval is simply the distance divided by the speed of light:
or
According to this approach, the relation is an approximation valid at low redshifts, to be replaced by a relation at large redshifts that is model-dependent. See velocity-redshift figure.
For relatively nearby galaxies (redshift much less than one), and will not have changed much, and can be estimated using the formula where is the speed of light. This gives the empirical relation found by Hubble.
For distant galaxies, (or ) cannot be calculated from without specifying a detailed model for how changes with time. The redshift is not even directly related to the recession velocity at the time the light set out, but it does have a simple interpretation: is the factor by which the universe has expanded while the photon was traveling towards the observer.
Another common source of confusion is that the accelerating universe does imply that the Hubble parameter is actually increasing with time; since in most accelerating models increases relatively faster than so decreases with time. (The recession velocity of one chosen galaxy does increase, but different galaxies passing a sphere of fixed radius cross the sphere more slowly at later times.)
On defining the dimensionless deceleration parameter it follows that
From this it is seen that the Hubble parameter is decreasing with time, unless ; the latter can only occur if the universe contains phantom energy, regarded as theoretically somewhat improbable.
However, in the standard Lambda-CDM model (Lambda-CDM or ΛCDM model), will tend to −1 from above in the distant future as the cosmological constant becomes increasingly dominant over matter; this implies that will approach from above to a constant value of ≈ 57 (km/s)/Mpc, and the scale factor of the universe will then grow exponentially in time.
In fact, this applies to non-Cartesian spaces as long as they are locally homogeneous and isotropic, specifically to the negatively and positively curved spaces frequently considered as cosmological models (see shape of the universe).
An observation stemming from this theorem is that seeing objects recede from us on Earth is not an indication that Earth is near to a center from which the expansion is occurring, but rather that observer in an expanding universe will see objects receding from them.
In a universe with a deceleration parameter equal to zero, it follows that , where is the time since the Big Bang. A non-zero, time-dependent value of simply requires integral of the Friedmann equations backwards from the present time to the time when the particle horizon size was zero.
It was long thought that was positive, indicating that the expansion is slowing down due to gravitational attraction. This would imply an age of the universe less than (which is about 14 billion years). For instance, a value for of 1/2 (once favoured by most theorists) would give the age of the universe as . The discovery in 1998 that is apparently negative means that the universe could actually be older than . However, estimates of the age of the universe are very close to .
Since the 17th century, astronomers and other thinkers have proposed many possible ways to resolve this paradox, but the currently accepted resolution depends in part on the Big Bang theory, and in part on the Hubble expansion: in a universe that existed for a finite amount of time, only the light of a finite number of stars has had enough time to reach us, and the paradox is resolved. Additionally, in an expanding universe, distant objects recede from us, which causes the light emanated from them to be redshifted and diminished in brightness by the time we see it.
In other words, one calculates 2998 × and one gives the units as Mpc or Mpc.
Occasionally a reference value other than 100 may be chosen, in which case a subscript is presented after to avoid confusion; e.g. denotes , which implies .
This should not be confused with the dimensionless value of Hubble's constant, usually expressed in terms of Planck units, obtained by multiplying by (from definitions of parsec and Planck time), for example for , a Planck unit version of is obtained.
where is the Hubble parameter, is the scale factor, is the gravitational constant, is the normalised spatial curvature of the universe and equal to −1, 0, or 1, and is the cosmological constant.
where is the density of matter today. From the Friedmann equation and thermodynamic principles we know for non-relativistic particles that their mass density decreases proportional to the inverse volume of the universe, so the equation above must be true. We can also define (see density parameter for )
therefore:
Also, by definition,
where the subscript refers to the values today, and . Substituting all of this into the Friedmann equation at the start of this section and replacing with gives
where is the mass density of the dark energy. By definition, an equation of state in cosmology is , and if this is substituted into the fluid equation, which describes how the mass density of the universe evolves with time, then
If is constant, then
implying:
Therefore, for dark energy with a constant equation of state , If this is substituted into the Friedman equation in a similar way as before, but this time set , which assumes a spatially flat universe, then (see shape of the universe)
If the dark energy derives from a cosmological constant such as that introduced by Einstein, it can be shown that . The equation then reduces to the last equation in the matter-dominated universe section, with set to zero. In that case the initial dark energy density is given by
If dark energy does not have a constant equation-of-state , then
and to solve this, must be parametrized, for example if , giving
This is slightly different from the age of the universe, which is approximately 13.8 billion years. The Hubble time is the age it would have had if the expansion had been linear, and it is different from the real age of the universe because the expansion is not linear; it depends on the energy content of the universe (see ).
We currently appear to be approaching a period where the expansion of the universe is exponential due to the increasing dominance of vacuum energy. In this regime, the Hubble parameter is constant, and the universe grows by a factor each Hubble time:
Likewise, the generally accepted value of 2.27 Exa-−1 means that (at the current rate) the universe would grow by a factor of in one exasecond.
Over long periods of time, the dynamics are complicated by general relativity, dark energy, inflation, etc., as explained above.
For most of the second half of the 20th century, the value of was estimated to be between .
The value of the Hubble constant was the topic of a long and rather bitter controversy between Gérard de Vaucouleurs, who claimed the value was around 100, and Allan Sandage, who claimed the value was near 50. In one demonstration of vitriol between the parties, when Sandage and his colleague Gustav Andreas Tammann formally acknowledged the shortcomings of confirming the systematic error of their method in 1975, Vaucouleurs responded: "It is unfortunate that this sober warning was so soon forgotten and ignored by most astronomers and textbook writers". In 1996, a debate moderated by John Bahcall between Sidney van den Bergh and Gustav Tammann was held in similar fashion to the earlier Shapley–Curtis debate over these two competing values.
This previously wide variance in estimates was partially resolved with the introduction of the Lambda-CDM model model of the universe in the late 1990s. Incorporating the ΛCDM model, observations of high-redshift clusters at X-ray and microwave wavelengths using the Sunyaev–Zel'dovich effect, measurements of anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation, and optical surveys all gave a value of around 50–70 km/s/Mpc for the constant.
An example of an "early" measurement, the Planck mission published in 2018 gives a value for of . In the "late" camp is the higher value of determined by the Hubble Space Telescope
and confirmed by the James Webb Space Telescope in 2023.
The "early" and "late" measurements disagree at the >5 σ level, beyond a plausible level of chance. The resolution to this disagreement is an ongoing area of active research.
The "late universe" or distance ladder measurements typically employ three stages or "rungs". In the first rung, distances to Cepheids are determined while trying to reduce luminosity errors from dust and correlations of metallicity with luminosity. The second rung uses
Type Ia supernova, explosions of almost constant amounts of mass. Thusly, these produce very similar amounts of light; the primary systematic error in this case is the limited number of objects that can be observed. The third rung of the distance ladder measures the red-shift of supernovae to extract the Hubble flow, and from that the constant. At this rung, corrections due to motion other than expansion are applied.
As an example of the kind of work needed to reduce systematic errors, photometry on observations from the James Webb Space Telescope of extra-galactic Cepheids confirm the findings from the HST. The higher resolution avoided confusion from crowding of stars in the field of view but came to the same value for H0.
The "early universe" or inverse distance ladder measures the observable consequences of spherical sound waves on primordial plasma density. These pressure waves – called baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) – ceased once the universe cooled enough for electrons to stay bound to nuclei, ending the plasma and allowing the photons trapped by interaction with the plasma to escape. The subsequent pressure waves are evident in very small perturbations in the density imprinted on the cosmic microwave background, and on the large-scale density of galaxies across the sky. Detailed structure in high-precision measurements of the CMB can be matched to physics models of the oscillations. These models depend upon the Hubble constant such that a match reveals a value for the constant. Similarly, the BAO affects the statistical distribution of matter, observed as distant galaxies across the sky.
These two independent measurements produce similar values for the constant from the current models, giving strong evidence that systematic errors in the measurements themselves do not affect the result.
One alternative method for constraining the Hubble constant involves transient events seen in multiple images of a strongly lensed object. A transient event, such as a supernova, is seen at different times in each of the lensed images, and if this time delay between each image can be measured, it can be used to constrain the Hubble constant. This method is commonly known as "time-delay cosmography", and was first proposed by Sjur Refsdal in 1964, years before the first strongly lensed object was observed. The first strongly lensed supernova to be discovered was named SN Refsdal in his honor. While Refsdal suggested this could be done with supernovae, he also noted that extremely luminous and distant star-like objects could also be used. These objects were later named quasar, and to date (April 2025) the majority of time-delay cosmography measurements have been done with strongly lensed quasars. This is because current samples of lensed quasars vastly outnumber known lensed supernovae, of which <10 are known. This is expected to change dramatically in the next few years, with surveys such as LSST expected to discover ~10 lensed SNe in the first three years of observation. For example time-delay constraints on H0, see the results from STRIDES and H0LiCOW in the table below.
In October 2018, scientists used information from gravitational wave events (especially those involving the merger of neutron stars, like GW170817), of determining the Hubble constant.
In July 2019, astronomers reported that a new method to determine the Hubble constant, and resolve the discrepancy of earlier methods, has been proposed based on the mergers of pairs of , following the detection of the neutron star merger of GW170817, an event known as a dark siren. Their measurement of the Hubble constant is (km/s)/Mpc.
Also in July 2019, astronomers reported another new method, using data from the Hubble Space Telescope and based on distances to Red giant calculated using the tip of the red-giant branch (TRGB) distance indicator. Their measurement of the Hubble constant is .
In February 2020, the Megamaser Cosmology Project published independent results based on astrophysical masers visible at cosmological distances and which do not require multi-step calibration. That work confirmed the distance ladder results and differed from the early-universe results at a statistical significance level of 95%.
In July 2020, measurements of the cosmic background radiation by the Atacama Cosmology Telescope predict that the Universe should be expanding more slowly than is currently observed.
In July 2023, an independent estimate of the Hubble constant was derived from a kilonova, the optical afterglow of a neutron star merger, using the expanding photosphere method. Due to the blackbody nature of early kilonova spectra, such systems provide strongly constraining estimators of cosmic distance. Using the kilonova AT2017gfo (the aftermath of, once again, GW170817), these measurements indicate a local-estimate of the Hubble constant of .
Alternatively, it could be that the observations are correct, but some unaccounted-for effect is causing the discrepancy. If the cosmological principle fails (see ), then the existing interpretations of the Hubble constant and the Hubble tension have to be revised, which might resolve the Hubble tension. In particular, we would need to be located within a very large void, up to about a redshift of 0.5, for such an explanation to conflate with supernovae and baryon acoustic oscillation observations. Yet another possibility is that the uncertainties in the measurements could have been underestimated, but given the internal agreements this is neither likely, nor resolves the overall tension.
Finally, another possibility is new physics beyond the currently accepted cosmological model of the universe, the Lambda-CDM model. There are very many theories in this category, for example, replacing general relativity with a modified theory of gravity could potentially resolve the tension, as can a dark energy component in the early universe, dark energy with a time-varying equation of state, or dark matter that decays into dark radiation. A problem faced by all these theories is that both early-universe and late-universe measurements rely on multiple independent lines of physics, and it is difficult to modify any of those lines while preserving their successes elsewhere. The scale of the challenge can be seen from how some authors have argued that new early-universe physics alone is not sufficient; while other authors argue that new late-universe physics alone is also not sufficient. Nonetheless, astronomers are trying, with interest in the Hubble tension growing strongly since the mid 2010s.
Hubble diagram
Cosmological constant abandoned
Interpretation
Redshift velocity and recessional velocity
Redshift velocity
Recessional velocity
Observability of parameters
Expansion velocity vs. peculiar velocity
Time-dependence of Hubble parameter
Idealized Hubble's law
Ultimate fate and age of the universe
Olbers' paradox
Dimensionless Hubble constant
Acceleration of the expansion
Derivation of the Hubble parameter
Matter-dominated universe (with a cosmological constant)
Matter- and dark energy-dominated universe
Units derived from the Hubble constant
Hubble time
Hubble length
Hubble volume
Determining the Hubble constant
Earlier measurements
Precision cosmology and the Hubble tension
Reducing systematic errors
Other kinds of measurements
Possible resolutions of the Hubble tension
Measurements of the Hubble constant
2025-05-27 W. Freedman et al Tip of the Red Giant Branch (TRGB) method (values from J-Region Asymptotic Giant Branch (JAGB) and Cepheids also reported)(JWST and HST data) 2025-01-14 Pascale et al. Timing delay of gravitationally lensed images of Supernova H0pe. Independent of cosmic distance ladder or the CMB. JWST data. (2023-05-11 cell and this one are the only 2 values with this method so far) 2024-12-01 SH0ES+CCHP JWST JWST, 3 methods, Cepheids, TRGB, JAGB, 2 groups data 2023-07-19 Sneppen et al. Due to the blackbody spectra of the optical counterpart of neutron-star mergers, these systems provide strongly constraining estimators of cosmic distance. 2023-07-13 SPT-3G CMB TT/TE/EE power spectrum. Less than 1 σ discrepancy with Planck. 2023-05-11 P. L. Kelly et al. Timing delay of gravitationally lensed images of SN Refsdal. Independent of cosmic distance ladder or the CMB. 2022-12-14 S. Contarini et al. Statistics of cosmic voids using BOSS DR12 data set. 2022-02-08 Pantheon+ SN Ia distance ladder (+SH0ES) 2022-06-17 T. de Jaeger et al. Use Type II supernovae as standardisable candles to obtain an independent measurement of the Hubble constant—13 SNe II with host-galaxy distances measured from Cepheid variables, the tip of the red giant branch, and geometric distance (NGC 4258). 2021-12-08 SH0ES Cepheids-SN Ia distance ladder (HST+Gaia EDR3+"Pantheon+"). 5 σ discrepancy with planck. 2021-09-17 Wendy Freedman Tip of the red-giant branch (TRGB) distance indicator (HST+Gaia EDR3) 2020-12-16 Hubble Space Telescope and Gaia EDR3 Combining earlier work on Red giant, using the tip of the red-giant branch (TRGB) distance indicator, with parallax measurements of Omega Centauri from Gaia EDR3. 2020-12-15 Hubble Space Telescope and Gaia EDR3 Combination of HST photometry and Gaia EDR3 parallaxes for Milky Way Cepheid variable, reducing the uncertainty in calibration of Cepheid luminosities to 1.0%. Overall uncertainty in the value for is 1.8%, which is expected to be reduced to 1.3% with a larger sample of type Ia supernovae in galaxies that are known Cepheid hosts. Continuation of a collaboration known as Supernovae, , for the Equation of State of Dark Energy (SHoES). 2020-12-04 E. J. Baxter, B. D. Sherwin Gravitational lensing in the CMB is used to estimate without referring to the sound horizon scale, providing an alternative method to analyze the Planck data. 2020-11-25 P. Denzel et al. Eight quadruply lensed galaxy systems are used to determine to a precision of 5%, in agreement with both "early" and "late" universe estimates. Independent of distance ladders and the cosmic microwave background. 2020-11-07 T. Sedgwick et al. Derived from 88 0.02 < < 0.05 Type Ia supernovae used as standard candle distance indicators. The estimate is corrected for the effects of peculiar velocities in the supernova environments, as estimated from the galaxy density field. The result assumes , and a sound horizon of , a value taken from Anderson et al. (2014). 2020-09-29 S. Mukherjee et al. Gravitational waves, assuming that the transient ZTF19abanrh found by the Zwicky Transient Facility is the optical counterpart to GW190521. Independent of distance ladders and the cosmic microwave background. 2020-06-18 T. de Jaeger et al. Use Type II supernovae as standardisable candles to obtain an independent measurement of the Hubble constant—7 SNe II with host-galaxy distances measured from Cepheid variables or the tip of the red giant branch. 2020-02-26 Megamaser Cosmology Project Geometric distance measurements to megamaser-hosting galaxies. Independent of distance ladders and the cosmic microwave background. 2019-10-14 STRIDES Modelling the mass distribution & time delay of the lensed quasar DES J0408-5354. 2019-09-12 SHARP/H0LiCOW Modelling three galactically lensed objects and their lenses using ground-based adaptive optics and the Hubble Space Telescope. 2019-08-20 K. Dutta et al. This is obtained analysing low-redshift cosmological data within ΛCDM model. The datasets used are type-Ia supernovae, baryon acoustic oscillations, time-delay measurements using strong-lensing, measurements using cosmic chronometers and growth measurements from large scale structure observations. 2019-08-15 M. J. Reid, D. W. Pesce, A. G. Riess Measuring the distance to Messier 106 using its supermassive black hole, combined with measurements of eclipsing binaries in the Large Magellanic Cloud. 2019-07-16 Hubble Space Telescope Distances to red giant stars are calculated using the tip of the red-giant branch (TRGB) distance indicator. 2019-07-10 H0LiCOW collaboration Updated observations of multiply imaged quasars, now using six quasars, independent of the cosmic distance ladder and independent of the cosmic microwave background measurements. 2019-07-08 The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and The Virgo Collaboration Uses radio counterpart of GW170817, combined with earlier gravitational wave (GW) and electromagnetic (EM) data. 2019-03-28 Fermi-LAT Gamma ray attenuation due to extragalactic light. Independent of the cosmic distance ladder and the cosmic microwave background. 2019-03-18 Hubble Space Telescope Precision HST photometry of Cepheids in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) reduce the uncertainty in the distance to the LMC from 2.5% to 1.3%. The revision increases the tension with CMB measurements to the 4.4 σ level (P=99.999% for Gaussian errors), raising the discrepancy beyond a plausible level of chance. Continuation of a collaboration known as Supernovae, , for the Equation of State of Dark Energy (SHoES). 2019-02-08 Joseph Ryan et al. Quasar angular size and baryon acoustic oscillations, assuming a flat ΛCDM model. Alternative models result in different (generally lower) values for the Hubble constant. 2018-11-06 Dark Energy Survey Supernova measurements using the inverse distance ladder method based on baryon acoustic oscillations. 2018-09-05 H0LiCOW collaboration Observations of multiply imaged quasars, independent of the cosmic distance ladder and independent of the cosmic microwave background measurements. 2018-07-18 Planck Mission Final Planck 2018 results. 2018-04-27 Hubble Space Telescope and Gaia Additional HST photometry of galactic Cepheids with early Gaia parallax measurements. The revised value increases tension with CMB measurements at the 3.8 σ level. Continuation of the SHoES collaboration. 2018-02-22 Hubble Space Telescope Parallax measurements of galactic Cepheids for enhanced calibration of the distance ladder; the value suggests a discrepancy with CMB measurements at the 3.7 σ level. The uncertainty is expected to be reduced to below 1% with the final release of the Gaia catalog. SHoES collaboration. 2017-10-16 The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and The Virgo Collaboration Standard siren measurement independent of normal "standard candle" techniques; the gravitational wave analysis of a binary neutron star (BNS) merger GW170817 directly estimated the luminosity distance out to cosmological scales. An estimate of fifty similar detections in the next decade may arbitrate tension of other methodologies. Detection and analysis of a neutron star-black hole merger (NSBH) may provide greater precision than BNS could allow. 2016-11-22 Hubble Space Telescope Uses time delays between multiple images of distant variable sources produced by strong gravitational lensing. Collaboration known as Lenses in COSMOGRAIL's Wellspring (H0LiCOW). 2016-08-04 Cosmicflows-3 Comparing redshift to other distance methods, including Tully–Fisher, Cepheid variable, and Type Ia supernovae. A restrictive estimate from the data implies a more precise value of . 2016-07-13 SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Baryon acoustic oscillations. An extended survey (eBOSS) began in 2014 and is expected to run through 2020. The extended survey is designed to explore the time when the universe was transitioning away from the deceleration effects of gravity from 3 to 8 billion years after the Big Bang. 2016-05-17 Hubble Space Telescope Type Ia supernova, the uncertainty is expected to go down by a factor of more than two with upcoming Gaia measurements and other improvements. SHoES collaboration. 2015-02 Planck Mission Results from an analysis of Plancks full mission were made public on 1 December 2014 at a conference in Ferrara, Italy. A full set of papers detailing the mission results were released in February 2015. 2013-10-01 Cosmicflows-2 Comparing redshift to other distance methods, including Tully–Fisher, Cepheid variable, and Type Ia supernovae. 2013-03-21 Planck Mission The ESA Planck Surveyor was launched in May 2009. Over a four-year period, it performed a significantly more detailed investigation of cosmic microwave radiation than earlier investigations using HEMT and bolometer technology to measure the CMB at a smaller scale than WMAP. On 21 March 2013, the European-led research team behind the Planck cosmology probe released the mission's data including a new CMB all-sky map and their determination of the Hubble constant. 2012-12-20 WMAP (9 years), combined with other measurements 2010 WMAP (7 years), combined with other measurements These values arise from fitting a combination of WMAP and other cosmological data to the simplest version of the ΛCDM model. If the data are fit with more general versions, tends to be smaller and more uncertain: typically around although some models allow values near .Results for and other cosmological parameters obtained by fitting a variety of models to several combinations of WMAP and other data are available at the NASA's LAMBDA website . 2010 WMAP only (7 years). 2009-02 WMAP (5 years), combined with other measurements 2009-02 WMAP only (5 years) 2007 WMAP (3 years), combined with other measurements 2006-08 Chandra X-ray Observatory Combined Sunyaev–Zeldovich effect and Chandra X-ray observations of . Adjusted uncertainty in table from Planck Collaboration 2013. 2003 WMAP (First year) only 2001-05 Hubble Space Telescope Key Project This project established the most precise optical determination, consistent with a measurement of based upon Sunyaev–Zel'dovich effect observations of many galaxy clusters having a similar accuracy. before 1996 — (est.) 1994 Supernova 1a Light Curve Shapes Determined relationship between luminosity of SN 1a's and their Light Curve Shapes. Riess et al. used this ratio of the light curve of SN 1972E and the Cepheid distance to NGC 5253 to determine the constant. mid 1970's Gérard de Vaucouleurs De Vaucouleurs believed he had improved the accuracy of Hubble's constant from Sandage's because he used 5x more primary indicators, 10× more calibration methods, 2× more secondary indicators, and 3× as many galaxy data points to derive his . early 1970s (est.) Allan Sandage and Gustav Tammann 1958 (est.) Allan Sandage This was the first good estimate of , but it would be decades before a consensus was achieved. 1956 Humason, Nicholas Mayall and Sandage 1929 Edwin Hubble, Hooker telescope Edwin Hubble, A Relation between Distance and Radial Velocity among Extra-Galactic Nebulae, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 168-173, March 1929 1927 Georges Lemaître First measurement and interpretation as a sign of the expansion of the universe.
See also
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