Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
The gravitationally lensed supernova Refsdal appeared in multiple images produced through gravitational lensing by a massive foreground galaxy cluster. After the supernova appeared in 2014, lens models of the galaxy cluster predicted that an additional image of the supernova would appear in 2015, which was subsequently observed. We use the time delays between the images to perform a blinded measurement of the expansion rate of the Universe, quantified by the Hubble constant (H-0). Using eight cluster lens models, we infer H-0 = 64:8(+4:4) (-4:3) kilometers per second per megaparsec. Using the two models most consistent with the observations, we find H-0 = 66:6(+4:1) (-3:3) kilometers per second per megaparsec. The observations are best reproduced by models that assign dark-matter halos to individual galaxies and the overall cluster.
Jean-Paul Richard Kneib, Huanyuan Shan, Nan Li
Frédéric Courbin, Martin Raoul Robert Millon
David Richard Harvey, Mathilde Jauzac, Richard Massey