Universe Expands Too Fast, Scientists Cannot Explain Why
The Universe is expanding faster than it should be. Scientists have confirmed this with record precision. The new measurement gives a Hubble constant of 73.50 km/s per megaparsec. That is just over 1% uncertainty. However, early Universe models predict a slower rate of about 67. Therefore, a gap remains.
Two Ways to Measure
Researchers use two different methods. One measures nearby stars and galaxies. The other looks back at the early cosmic microwave background. Both approaches should agree. But they do not. This ongoing discrepancy is called the Hubble tension.
A More Reliable Framework
An international team combined decades of observations. They created a unified “distance network. ”For example, they used Cepheid stars, red giants, and supernovae. The results stayed stable even when removing one method. As a result, a single overlooked error cannot explain the tension.
Missing Physics?
The standard model of cosmology may be incomplete. Something could be missing from our understanding. Possible culprits include unknown particles or changes to dark energy. Gravity itself might behave differently. “If the tension is real, it points to new physics,” the authors conclude.
Upcoming observatories will deliver even sharper measurements. The team has made its data openly available. This framework allows future expansion. For now, the Universe keeps its secret. The Hubble tension remains one of the biggest puzzles in cosmology.

