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Hauptverfasser: Seo, Eungwang, Kim, Kyungmin, Li, Zhuotao, Janquart, Justin, Gray, Rachel, Hendry, Martin
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.01321
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author Seo, Eungwang
Kim, Kyungmin
Li, Zhuotao
Janquart, Justin
Gray, Rachel
Hendry, Martin
author_facet Seo, Eungwang
Kim, Kyungmin
Li, Zhuotao
Janquart, Justin
Gray, Rachel
Hendry, Martin
contents The disagreement between early and late Universe electromagnetic measurements of the Hubble constant, $H_0$, known as the Hubble tension, highlights the need for independent and complementary probes. Gravitational-wave events have recently emerged as such a probe for constraining cosmological parameters. $H_{0}$ inference using these events relies on sky localization and luminosity distance estimates, both of which can be significantly improved for strongly lensed events with appropriate lens modeling. In this context, we propose utilizing strong lensing of dark sirens, gravitational-wave events without identified electromagnetic counterparts, in combination with strong lensing of galaxies as a novel method for measuring $H_0$. The constant is inferred from the luminosity distances of these lensed dark sirens and the redshifts of their host galaxies, combining information from individual events to obtain statistically stronger constraints when multiple events are available. We adopt a simulated galaxy catalog, \texttt{MICECATv2}, as the basis for simulating strong lensing of galaxies and to provide the redshift information of host galaxy candidates required to infer $H_0$. We also examine the impact of galaxy catalog incompleteness on the resulting $H_0$ inference. Our results demonstrate that using only 8 strongly lensed dark sirens, analyzed with a dedicated galaxy-galaxy lensing catalog, can improve the precision of $H_{0}$ by roughly 50\% compared to 250 unlensed events.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_01321
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The impact of strong lensing on Hubble constant measurements with gravitational-wave dark sirens
Seo, Eungwang
Kim, Kyungmin
Li, Zhuotao
Janquart, Justin
Gray, Rachel
Hendry, Martin
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
The disagreement between early and late Universe electromagnetic measurements of the Hubble constant, $H_0$, known as the Hubble tension, highlights the need for independent and complementary probes. Gravitational-wave events have recently emerged as such a probe for constraining cosmological parameters. $H_{0}$ inference using these events relies on sky localization and luminosity distance estimates, both of which can be significantly improved for strongly lensed events with appropriate lens modeling. In this context, we propose utilizing strong lensing of dark sirens, gravitational-wave events without identified electromagnetic counterparts, in combination with strong lensing of galaxies as a novel method for measuring $H_0$. The constant is inferred from the luminosity distances of these lensed dark sirens and the redshifts of their host galaxies, combining information from individual events to obtain statistically stronger constraints when multiple events are available. We adopt a simulated galaxy catalog, \texttt{MICECATv2}, as the basis for simulating strong lensing of galaxies and to provide the redshift information of host galaxy candidates required to infer $H_0$. We also examine the impact of galaxy catalog incompleteness on the resulting $H_0$ inference. Our results demonstrate that using only 8 strongly lensed dark sirens, analyzed with a dedicated galaxy-galaxy lensing catalog, can improve the precision of $H_{0}$ by roughly 50\% compared to 250 unlensed events.
title The impact of strong lensing on Hubble constant measurements with gravitational-wave dark sirens
topic Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.01321