학술논문

Measuring Hubble Constant with Dark Neutron Star-Black Hole Mergers
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
Language
Abstract
Detection of gravitational waves (GWs) from neutron star-black hole (NSBH) standard sirens can provide local measurements of the Hubble constant ($H_0$), regardless of the detection of an electromagnetic (EM) counterpart: The presence of matter terms in GWs breaks the degeneracy between mass parameters and redshift, allowing simultaneous measurement of both the luminosity distance and redshift. Although the tidally disrupted NSBH systems can have EM emission, the detection prospects of an EM counterpart will be limited to $z < 0.8$ in the optical, in the era of the next generation GW detectors. However, the distinctive merger morphology and the high redshift detectability of tidally-disrupted NSBH makes them promising standard siren candidates for this method. Using recent constraints on the equation-of-state of NSs from multi-messenger observations of NICER and LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA, we show the prospects of measuring $H_{0}$ solely from GW observation of NSBH systems, achievable by Einstein Telescope (ET) and Cosmic Explorer (CE) detectors. We first analyze individual events to quantify the effect of high-frequency ($\ge$ 500 Hz) tidal distortions on the inference of NS tidal deformability parameter ($\Lambda$) and hence on $H_0$. We find that disruptive mergers can constrain $\Lambda$ up to $\mathcal{O}(60\%)$ more precisely than non-disruptive ones. However, this precision is not sufficient to place stringent constraints on the $H_0$ for individual events. By performing Bayesian analysis on different sets of simulated NSBH data (up to $N=100$ events, corresponding to a timescale from several hours to a day observation) in the ET+CE detectors, we find that NSBH systems enable unbiased 4\% - 13\% precision on the estimate of $H_0$ (68\% credible interval). This is a similar measurement precision found in studies analyzing populations of NSBH mergers with EM counterparts in the LVKC O5 era.
Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures