A groundbreaking new study led by researchers from the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Mumbai, in collaboration with Professor Subir Sarkar from the University of Oxford, has cast fresh skepticism on the long-accepted consensus that our universe’s expansion is accelerating. This widely held view, which has dominated cosmology for more than two decades, attributes the acceleration to a mysterious phenomenon known as dark energy, purportedly arising from quantum vacuum effects. Their controversial findings, published in the prestigious Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, reopen the debate on cosmic expansion dynamics, challenging one of the most significant astronomical discoveries recognized with the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics.
The impetus for this re-examination stems from the team’s in-depth analysis of the Pantheon+ dataset—a comprehensive compilation encompassing over 1,700 Type Ia supernovae observations. Since the late 1990s, these “standard candles” have been instrumental for astronomers to map the universe’s expansion history. Type Ia supernovae are thermonuclear explosions of white dwarf stars that shine with remarkable uniformity, making them invaluable cosmic distance markers. The initial analyses of such supernovae provided the first convincing evidence that the expansion rate of the universe was speeding up, leading to the introduction of dark energy as a dominant cosmic component.
Professor Subir Sarkar, alongside co-researchers Animesh Sah and Mohamed Rameez, critically revisited the Pantheon+ supernova dataset, integrating a novel correction that accounts for the progenitor stars’ age — an important astrophysical factor previously underappreciated in cosmological distance measurements. This correction is vital because mounting evidence suggests that the intrinsic brightness of Type Ia supernovae is not as uniform as once thought; it systematically varies depending on the stellar populations from which these supernovae arise. Ignoring this effect can introduce biases that falsely appear as acceleration in cosmic expansion.
Upon applying this essential progenitor age correction, the researchers found that the once clear signal of universal acceleration diminishes considerably. In fact, their recalibrated analysis indicates that the universe may not be accelerating at all; rather, the expansion might be decelerating overall. This conclusion directly contradicts decades of cosmological inference, suggesting that our cosmic picture, including the role and nature of dark energy, needs urgent re-evaluation.
One particularly striking aspect of the study is its investigation into the isotropy of the inferred acceleration. The standard cosmological principle assumes that the universe is homogeneous and isotropic on large scales, implying that expansion rates should be uniform in every direction. However, Sarkar and his colleagues detected a clear anisotropy in the acceleration signal. Their findings reveal that the direction of apparent acceleration aligns predominantly with the local motion of our galaxy cluster, corresponding closely to the hotspot observed in the cosmic microwave background (CMB)—the afterglow of the Big Bang.
This anisotropic pattern is deeply troubling for the dark energy hypothesis. If the acceleration were truly driven by a quantum vacuum energy—a cosmological constant—it should be uniform and observed equally in all directions. The anisotropy uncovered suggests that other, more mundane explanations might be at play, such as local cosmic flows, unaccounted systematic errors, or incomplete modeling of supernova light curves. Professor Sarkar emphasizes, “The anisotropy rules out dark energy independently of the progenitor age correction, which surprisingly turns what was thought to be isotropic acceleration into deceleration.”
The scientific community is divided over these provocative claims. In the very same edition of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, a contrasting study led by Professor Maria Vincenzi, also from the University of Oxford, robustly defends the traditional interpretation. Her team reaffirms that even after accounting for host galaxy age effects and other astrophysical systematics, evidence strongly supports an accelerating universe. Vincenzi highlights the expertise of her co-authors, who collectively possess deep knowledge of supernova astrophysics and galaxy evolution, reinforcing that their conclusions bolster confidence in the standard cosmological model and point toward dark energy as a fundamental cosmic component.
These conflicting analyses underscore a critical crossroads for observational cosmology. The concept of an accelerating universe and the existence of dark energy have, until recently, provided a coherent framework for explaining a wide range of astrophysical phenomena. Yet, if these new findings hold, it suggests that our understanding of fundamental cosmic physics might require significant revision. It also serves as a powerful reminder of the intricate astrophysical dependencies inherent in cosmic distance measurements that are often simplified in favor of cosmological parameters.
Looking to the future, both camps eagerly anticipate the enormous data influx expected from the Rubin Observatory’s Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). Scheduled to commence in the near future, LSST will dramatically increase the sample size of observed supernovae, extending far beyond current datasets. With hundreds of thousands of high-quality Type Ia supernova observations, LSST promises unparalleled precision to test cosmic expansion rates and probe the properties of dark energy—or its absence—with unprecedented statistical power.
Should LSST confirm the lack of acceleration uncovered by Professor Sarkar’s team, it could force a paradigm shift that challenges the very foundation of modern cosmological physics. Conversely, confirmation of the accelerating expansion would further entrench the mysterious concept of dark energy as an essential driver of cosmic evolution, highlighting the profound need to unravel its nature. Regardless of the outcome, this scientific dialogue exemplifies the rigorous self-correcting process of astronomy, where each new dataset can reshape our cosmic understanding.
The implications of this debate reverberate beyond astrophysics, penetrating fundamental physics, quantum field theory, and related disciplines. Dark energy, if real, presents one of the most daunting problems in physics, potentially linked to the quantum vacuum and requiring new physics beyond the Standard Model. The potential falsification or modification of this concept could redirect theoretical work toward alternative explanations for cosmic acceleration or lead to entirely novel frameworks describing the macrostructure of spacetime.
In summary, this challenging study catalyzes a vital and vibrant re-examination of the universe’s expansion history. It juxtaposes two competing narratives: one proposing a decelerating universe modified by astrophysical corrections, and the other asserting robust evidence for acceleration and the existence of dark energy. As the astronomy community prepares for an era of transformative observational capability, the coming years promise to be pivotal in resolving these profound cosmic mysteries.
Subject of Research: Cosmic expansion rate and the role of Type Ia supernovae brightness corrections in determining acceleration or deceleration of the universe.
Article Title: Pantheon+ supernovae corrected for progenitor age indicate the universe is decelerating
News Publication Date: June 2026
Web References:
- DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stag844
- Relevant journal: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
References:
- Sah, A., Rameez, M., & Sarkar, S. (2026). Pantheon+ supernovae corrected for progenitor age indicate the universe is decelerating. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
- Wiseman, P. et al. (2026). Still accelerating: type Ia supernova cosmology is robust to host galaxy age evolution. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Keywords
Cosmic expansion, Type Ia supernovae, Dark energy, Universe acceleration, Progenitor age correction, Cosmological anisotropy, Quantum vacuum, Pantheon+ dataset, Rubin Observatory LSST, Cosmology debate, Cosmic microwave background, Nobel Prize in Physics

