4.6 Article

Constraining the Hubble constant to a precision of about 1% using multi-band dark standard siren detections

Journal

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11433-021-1859-9

Keywords

gravitational wave standard siren; Hubble constant; stellar-mass binary black hole; photometric luminosity; multi-band gravitational wave detection

Funding

  1. Guangdong Major Project of Basic and Applied Basic Research [2019B030302001]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [12173104, 11805286, 11690022]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFC2201400]

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This study comprehensively investigates the ability to infer the Hubble constant using gravitational wave events, finding that a multi-detector network involving TianQin and LISA can achieve high precision. Additionally, high-quality spectroscopic redshift information is crucial for improving estimation precision.
Gravitational wave signal from the inspirai of stellar-mass binary black hole can be used as standard sirens to perform cosmological inference. This inspirai covers a wide range of frequency bands, from the millihertz band to the audio-band, allowing for detections by both space-borne and ground-based gravitational wave detectors. In this work, we conduct a comprehensive study on the ability to constrain the Hubble constant using the dark standard sirens, or gravitational wave events that lack electromagnetic counterparts. To acquire the redshift information, we weight the galaxies within the localization error box with photometric information from several bands and use them as a proxy for the binary black hole redshift. We discover that TianQin is expected to constrain the Hubble constant to a precision of roughly 30% through detections of 10 gravitational wave events; in the most optimistic case, the Hubble constant can be constrained to a precision of <10%, assuming TianQin I+II. In the optimistic case, the multi-detector network of TianQin and LISA is capable of constraining the Hubble constant to within 5% precision. It is worth highlighting that the multi-band network of TianQin and Einstein Telescope is capable of constraining the Hubble constant to a precision of about 1%. We conclude that inferring the Hubble constant without bias from photo-z galaxy catalog is achievable, and we also demonstrate self-consistency using the P-P plot. On the other hand, high-quality spectroscopic redshift information is crucial for improving the estimation precision of Hubble constant.

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