Author:
Gray Rachel,Beirnaert Freija,Karathanasis Christos,Revenu Benoît,Turski Cezary,Chen Anson,Baker Tessa,Vallejo Sergio,Romano Antonio Enea,Ghosh Tathagata,Ghosh Archisman,Leyde Konstantin,Mastrogiovanni Simone,More Surhud
Abstract
Abstract
In the absence of numerous gravitational-wave detections with confirmed electromagnetic
counterparts, the “dark siren” method has emerged as a leading technique of gravitational-wave
cosmology. The method allows redshift information of such events to be inferred statistically from
a catalogue of potential host galaxies. Due to selection effects, dark siren analyses necessarily
depend on the mass distribution of compact objects and the evolution of their merger rate with
redshift. Informative priors on these quantities will impact the inferred posterior constraints on
the Hubble constant (H
0). It is thus crucial to vary these unknown distributions during an
H
0 inference. This was not possible in earlier analyses due to the high computational cost,
restricting them to either excluding galaxy catalogue information, or fixing the
gravitational-wave population mass distribution and risking introducing bias to the H
0
measurement. This paper introduces a significantly enhanced version of the Python package
gwcosmo, which allows joint estimation of cosmological and compact binary population
parameters. This thereby ensures the analysis is now robust to a major source of potential
bias. The gravitational-wave events from the Third Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalogue are
reanalysed with the GLADE+ galaxy catalogue, and an updated, more reliable measurement of H
0 =
69+12
-7 km s-1 Mpc-1 is found (maximum a posteriori probability and 68%
highest density interval). This improved method will enable cosmological analyses with future
gravitational-wave detections to make full use of the information available (both from galaxy
catalogues and the compact binary population itself), leading to promising new independent bounds
on the Hubble constant.
Subject
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
14 articles.
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