A Hubble constant measurement from superluminal motion of the jet in GW170817
Kenta Hotokezaka, Ehud Nakar, Ore Gottlieb, Samaya Nissanke, Kento, Masuda, Gregg Hallinan, Kunal P. Mooley, and Adam. T. Deller

TL;DR
This paper improves the measurement of the Hubble constant using superluminal motion observations of the GW170817 jet, providing a more precise, independent estimate that could help resolve existing measurement discrepancies.
Contribution
It introduces a refined H_0 measurement from GW170817 by incorporating high-resolution radio imaging data, reducing uncertainties compared to previous gravitational wave analyses.
Findings
H_0 measured as 68.9^{+4.7}_{-4.6} km/s/Mpc
Radio imaging constrains viewing angle, improving H_0 accuracy
Future localized GW events could resolve H_0 tension
Abstract
The Hubble constant () measures the current expansion rate of the Universe, and plays a fundamental role in cosmology. Tremendous effort has been dedicated over the past decades to measure . Notably, Planck cosmic microwave background (CMB) and the local Cepheid-supernovae distance ladder measurements determine with a precision of and respectively. A - level of discrepancy exists between the two measurements, for reasons that have yet to be understood. Gravitational wave (GW) sources accompanied by electromagnetic (EM) counterparts offer a completely independent standard siren (the GW analogue of an astronomical standard candle) measurement of , as demonstrated following the discovery of the neutron star merger, GW170817. This measurement does not assume a cosmological model and is independent of a cosmic distance ladder. The first…
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