A Future Percent-level Measurement of the Hubble Expansion at Redshift 0.8 with Advanced LIGO

Farr, Will M. and Fishbach, Maya and Ye, Jiani and Holz, Daniel E. (2019) A Future Percent-level Measurement of the Hubble Expansion at Redshift 0.8 with Advanced LIGO. The Astrophysical Journal, 883 (2). L42. ISSN 2041-8213

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Abstract

Simultaneous measurements of distance and redshift can be used to constrain the expansion history of the universe and associated cosmological parameters. Merging binary black hole (BBH) systems are standard sirens—their gravitational waveform provides direct information about the luminosity distance to the source. There is, however, a perfect degeneracy between the source masses and redshift; some nongravitational information is necessary to break the degeneracy and determine the redshift of the source. Here we suggest that the pair instability supernova (PISN) process, thought to be the source of the observed upper limit on the black hole mass in merging BBH systems at $\sim 45\,{M}_{\odot }$, imprints a mass scale in the population of BBH mergers and permits a measurement of the redshift–luminosity–distance relation with these sources. We simulate five years of BBH detections in the Advanced LIGO and Virgo detectors with a realistic BBH merger rate, mass distribution with smooth PISN cutoff, and measurement uncertainty. We show that after one year of operation at design sensitivity the BBH population can constrain H(z) to $6.1 \% $ at a pivot redshift $z\simeq 0.8$. After five years the constraint improves to $2.9 \% $. If the PISN cutoff is sharp, the uncertainty is smaller by about a factor of two. This measurement relies only on general relativity and the presence of a mass scale that is approximately fixed or calibrated across cosmic time; it is independent of any distance ladder. Observations by future "third-generation" gravitational wave detectors, which can see BBH mergers throughout the universe, would permit subpercent cosmographical measurements to z ≳ 4 within one month of observation.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Digi Academic > Physics and Astronomy
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@opendigiacademic.com
Date Deposited: 30 May 2023 12:10
Last Modified: 06 Sep 2024 08:23
URI: http://publications.journalstm.com/id/eprint/955

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