H0LiCOW I. $H_0$ Lenses in COSMOGRAIL's Wellspring: Program Overview
S. H. Suyu, V. Bonvin, F. Courbin, C. D. Fassnacht, C. E. Rusu, D., Sluse, T. Treu, K. C. Wong, M. W. Auger, X. Ding, S. Hilbert, P. J. Marshall,, N. Rumbaugh, A. Sonnenfeld, M. Tewes, O. Tihhonova, A. Agnello, R. D., Blandford, G. C.-F. Chen, T. Collett, L. V. E. Koopmans

TL;DR
The H0LiCOW program aims to measure the Hubble constant with less than 3.5% uncertainty using gravitational lens time delays, high-resolution imaging, and spectroscopy across five lens systems, improving constraints on cosmological parameters.
Contribution
This paper presents the overview and methodology of the H0LiCOW program, which is the first to aim for such precise measurements of H0 using gravitational lens time delays.
Findings
Expected H0 measurement precision <3.5%
Constraints on spatial curvature, dark energy equation of state, and neutrino species
Foundation for future cosmological distance measurements
Abstract
Strong gravitational lens systems with time delays between the multiple images allow measurements of time-delay distances, which are primarily sensitive to the Hubble constant that is key to probing dark energy, neutrino physics, and the spatial curvature of the Universe, as well as discovering new physics. We present H0LiCOW ( Lenses in COSMOGRAIL's Wellspring), a program that aims to measure with uncertainty from five lens systems (B1608+656, RXJ1131-1231, HE0435-1223, WFI2033-4723 and HE1104-1805). We have been acquiring (1) time delays through COSMOGRAIL and Very Large Array monitoring, (2) high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope imaging for the lens mass modeling, (3) wide-field imaging and spectroscopy to characterize the lens environment, and (4) moderate-resolution spectroscopy to obtain the stellar velocity dispersion of the lenses for mass modeling. In…
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