By studying how light from eight distant quasars is gravitationally lensed as it propagates towards Earth, astronomers have calculated a new value for the Hubble constant – a parameter that describes the rate at which the universe is expanding. The result agrees more closely with previous “late-universe” probes of this constant than it does with calculations based on observations of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) in the early universe, strengthening the notion that we may be misunderstanding something fundamental about how the universe works. The universe has been expanding ever since the Big Bang nearly 14 billion years ago. We know this, in part, because of observations made in the 1920s by the American astronomer Edwin Hubble. By measuring the redshift of various galaxies, Hubble discovered that galaxies further away from Earth are moving away faster than galaxies that are closer to us. The relationship between this speed and the galaxies’ distance is known as the Hubble constant, *H*0.…