The Distance to NGC 4993: The Host Galaxy of the Gravitational-wave Event GW170817
Jens Hjorth, Andrew J. Levan, Nial R. Tanvir, Joe D. Lyman,, Rados{\l}aw Wojtak, Sophie L. Schr{\o}der, Ilya Mandel, Christa Gall, Sofie, H. Bruun

TL;DR
This paper determines the distance to NGC 4993, the host galaxy of GW170817, using two independent methods, confirming the gravitational-wave based distance and improving the understanding of the event's location.
Contribution
The study provides the first electromagnetic distance measurement to NGC 4993 using redshift and the Fundamental Plane, validating gravitational-wave distance estimates.
Findings
Distance to NGC 4993 is approximately 41 Mpc.
Electromagnetic and gravitational-wave distances are consistent.
Confirms NGC 4993 as the host galaxy of GW170817.
Abstract
The historic detection of gravitational waves from a binary neutron star merger (GW170817) and its electromagnetic counterpart led to the first accurate (sub-arcsecond) localization of a gravitational-wave event. The transient was found to be 10" from the nucleus of the S0 galaxy NGC 4993. We report here the luminosity distance to this galaxy using two independent methods. (1) Based on our MUSE/VLT measurement of the heliocentric redshift () we infer the systemic recession velocity of the NGC 4993 group of galaxies in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) frame to be km s. Using constrained cosmological simulations we estimate the line-of-sight peculiar velocity to be km s, resulting in a cosmic velocity of km s ($z_{\rm cosmic}=0.00980\pm…
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