Probing the environment around GW170817 with DESI: insights on galaxy group peculiar velocities for standard siren measurements

Abstract

We present a new measurement of the Hubble constant, H0, following the gravitational wave event GW170817 and Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) observations. A standard siren measurement with a nearby (luminosity distance 40 Mpc) event such as GW170817 is typically sensitive to the peculiar motion of the host galaxy due to local dynamics. Previous measurements from this event have taken advantage of peculiar velocity measurements of nearby galaxies, including a handful of objects in the galaxy group that the host of the event, NGC 4993, has been associated with. Still, the group's properties and NGC 4993's membership were debated. We present DESI observations of thousands of galaxies in the vicinity of NGC 4993, resulting in 39 group galaxies and a five-fold increase in galaxies compared to previous observations with many of these galaxies contributing to a peculiar velocity measurement. Examining the local dynamics, our observations support the presence of a galaxy group of which NGC 4993 is part with a halo mass of order 1013~M. Using peculiar velocity measurements from our Fundamental Plane galaxies observations, we find H0 =70.9+6.4-8.5 km s-1 Mpc-1. In addition, using a peculiar velocity measurement for NGC 4993 from Surface Brightness Fluctuations in Cosmicflows-4 we find H0 =73.4+3.3-3.9 km s-1 Mpc-1. We study the impact of different galaxy selection criteria on the determination of the peculiar velocity and, in turn, on the H0 measurement. Our results highlight the importance of multiplexed spectroscopic observations of the environments of gravitational wave events to probe local dynamics, which can ultimately affect standard siren measurements.

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