Hearing the Hubble tension with shouts and murmurs: measuring H<sub>0</sub> using the gravitational-wave background
ORAL
Abstract
Early- and late-universe measurements of the Hubble constant are in major disagreement, amounting to a conflict known as the Hubble tension. This tension has prompted the development of many novel approaches to measuring the Hubble constant, including the use of gravitational waves from individually-resolved compact object mergers, so-called "standard sirens." While the standard siren method has been well-explored, the gravitational-wave background arising from unresolved mergers has not yet been considered as a means to study the Hubble tension. In this talk, I will demonstrate how combining resolved binary black hole mergers with the astrophysical gravitational-wave background can be used to not only measure the Hubble constant, but also constrain the properties of the binary black hole population. I will present the results of applying our new method to existing and future gravitational-wave data. Our procedure serves as a means to probe the Hubble tension independently of conventional methods, while simultaneously providing insight on the population of binary black hole mergers across cosmic time.
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Publication: B. Cousins, K. Schumacher, K.-W. A. Chung, T. Callister, C. Talbot, D. Holz, and N. Yunes. "Hearing the Hubble tension with shouts and murmurs: measuring H0 using the gravitational-wave background" (in prep.) (2024)
Presenters
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Bryce Cousins
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Authors
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Bryce Cousins
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Adrian Ka-Wai Chung
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Kristen Schumacher
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Thomas A Callister
University of Chicago
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Colm Talbot
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Daniel Holz
University of Chicago
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Nicolas Yunes
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign