4.7 Article

Precision of Hubble constant derived using black hole binary absolute distances and statistical redshift information

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 77, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.77.043512

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Measured gravitational waveforms from black hole binary inspiral events directly determine absolute luminosity distances. To use these data for cosmology, it is necessary to independently obtain redshifts for the events, which may be difficult for those without electromagnetic counterparts. Here it is demonstrated that certainly in principle, and possibly in practice, clustering of galaxies allows extraction of the redshift information from a sample statistically for the purpose of estimating mean cosmological parameters, without identification of host galaxies for individual events. We extract mock galaxy samples from the 6th data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey resembling those that would be associated with inspiral events of stellar mass black holes falling into massive black holes at redshift z approximate to 0.1 to 0.5. A simple statistical procedure is described to estimate a likelihood function for the Hubble constant H-0: each galaxy in a LISA error volume contributes linearly to the log likelihood for the source redshift, and the log likelihood for each source contributes linearly to that of H-0. This procedure is shown to provide an accurate and unbiased estimator of H-0. It is estimated that a precision better than 1% in H-0 may be possible if the rate of such events is sufficiently high, on the order of 20 to z = 0.5.

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