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A Gravitational-wave Measurement of the Hubble Constant Following the Second Observing Run of Advanced LIGO and Virgo

Author(s)
B. P. AbbottKim, Young-MinVirgo CollaborationLIGO Sci Collaboration
Issued Date
2021-03
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/abdcb7
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/58415
Fulltext
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-4357/abdcb7
Citation
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, v.909, no.2, pp.218
Abstract
This paper presents the gravitational-wave measurement of the Hubble constant (H0) using the detections from the first and second observing runs of the Advanced LIGO and Virgo detector network. The presence of the transient electromagnetic counterpart of the binary neutron star GW170817 led to the first standard-siren measurement of H0. Here we additionally use binary black hole detections in conjunction with galaxy catalogs and report a joint measurement. Our updated measurement is H0 = ${69}_{-8}^{+16}$ km s−1 Mpc−1 (68.3% of the highest density posterior interval with a flat-in-log prior) which is an improvement by a factor of 1.04 (about 4%) over the GW170817-only value of ${69}_{-8}^{+17}$ km s−1 Mpc−1. A significant additional contribution currently comes from GW170814, a loud and well-localized detection from a part of the sky thoroughly covered by the Dark Energy Survey. With numerous detections anticipated over the upcoming years, an exhaustive understanding of other systematic effects are also going to become increasingly important. These results establish the path to cosmology using gravitational-wave observations with and without transient electromagnetic counterparts.
Publisher
IOP PUBLISHING LTD
ISSN
0004-637X
Keyword (Author)
Gravitational wave astronomyHubble constant
Keyword
COSMOLOGICAL PARAMETERSLUMINOSITY FUNCTIONSK-CORRECTIONSDATA RELEASECATALOG1STDISTRIBUTIONSEVOLUTIONDENSITY

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