Estimates of the Hubble constant, H0, from the distance ladder and the
cosmic microwave background (CMB) differ at the ∼3-σ level,
indicating a potential issue with the standard ΛCDM cosmology.
Interpreting this tension correctly requires a model comparison calculation
depending on not only the traditional `n-σ' mismatch but also the
tails of the likelihoods. Determining the form of the tails of the local H0
likelihood is impossible with the standard Gaussian least-squares
approximation, as it requires using non-Gaussian distributions to faithfully
represent anchor likelihoods and model outliers in the Cepheid and supernova
(SN) populations, and simultaneous fitting of the full distance-ladder dataset
to correctly propagate uncertainties. We have developed a Bayesian hierarchical
model that describes the full distance ladder, from nearby geometric anchors
through Cepheids to Hubble-Flow SNe. This model does not rely on any
distributions being Gaussian, allowing outliers to be modeled and obviating the
need for arbitrary data cuts. Sampling from the ∼3000-parameter joint
posterior using Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, we find H0 = (72.72 ± 1.67)
kms−1Mpc−1 when applied to the outlier-cleaned Riess et al.
(2016) data, and (73.15±1.78) kms−1Mpc−1 with SN
outliers reintroduced. Our high-fidelity sampling of the low-H0 tail of the
distance-ladder likelihood allows us to apply Bayesian model comparison to
assess the evidence for deviation from ΛCDM. We set up this comparison
to yield a lower limit on the odds of the underlying model being ΛCDM
given the distance-ladder and Planck XIII (2016) CMB data. The odds against
ΛCDM are at worst 10:1 or 7:1, depending on whether the SNe outliers
are cut or modeled, or 60:1 if an approximation to the Planck Int. XLVI (2016)
likelihood is used.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, matches version submitted to MNRAS. The model
code used in this analysis is available for download at
https://github.com/sfeeney/hh