How Low Can You Go: Constraining the Effects of Catalog Incompleteness on Dark Siren Cosmology
Abstract
Gravitational waves (GWs) serve as standard sirens by directly encoding the luminosity distance to their source. When the host galaxy redshift is known, for example, through observation of an electromagnetic (EM) counterpart, GW detections can provide an independent measurement of the Hubble constant, H0. However, even in the absence of an EM counterpart, inferring H0 is possible through the dark siren method. In this approach, every galaxy in the GW localization volume is considered a potential host that contributes to a measurement of H0, with redshift information supplied by galaxy catalogs. Using mock galaxy catalogs, we explore the effect of catalog incompleteness on dark siren measurements of H0. We find that in the case of well-localized GW events, if GW hosts are found in all galaxies with host halo masses Mh > 2 ×1011 Mh-1, catalogs only need to be complete down to the 1% brightest magnitude Mi < -22.43 to draw an unbiased, informative posterior on H0. We demonstrate that this is a direct result of the clustering of fainter galaxies around brighter and more massive galaxies. For a mock galaxy catalog without clustering, or for GW localization volumes that are too large, using only the brightest galaxies results in a biased H0 posterior. These results are important for informing future dark siren analyses with LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA as well as next-generation detectors.
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