# Standard sirens with a running Planck mass

**Authors:** Macarena Lagos, Maya Fishbach, Philippe Landry, Daniel E. Holz

arXiv: 1901.03321 · 2019-04-10

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how a time-varying Planck mass affects gravitational wave propagation and standard siren measurements, showing that GW observations can constrain modifications to gravity and impact cosmological parameter estimates.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that GW observations can jointly constrain the running of the Planck mass and the Hubble constant, providing constraints comparable to current cosmological methods.

## Key findings

- GW observations constrain $c_M$ to within ±0.9 with 100 BNS events
- Current GW data from GW170817 constrains $c_M$ to approximately -9^{+21}_{-28}
- A nonzero $c_M$ can bias $H_0$ measurements if not properly accounted for

## Abstract

We consider the effect of a time-varying Planck mass on the propagation of gravitational waves (GWs). A running Planck mass arises naturally in several modified gravity theories, and here we focus on those that carry an additional dark energy field responsible for the late-time accelerated expansion of the universe, yet--like general relativity (GR)--propagate only two GW polarizations, both traveling at the speed of light. Because a time-varying Planck mass affects the amplitude of the GWs and therefore the inferred distance to the source, standard siren measurements of $H_0$ are degenerate with the parameter $c_M$ characterizing the time-varying Planck mass, where $c_M=0$ corresponds to GR with a constant Planck mass. The effect of non-zero $c_M$ will have a noticeable impact on GWs emitted by binary neutron stars (BNSs) at the sensitivities and distances observable by ground-based GW detectors such as advanced LIGO and A+, implying that standard siren measurements can provide joint constraints on $H_0$ and $c_M$. Assuming a $\Lambda$CDM evolution of the universe and taking Planck's measurement of $H_0$ as a prior, we find that GW170817 constrains $c_M = -9^{+21}_{-28}$ ($68.3\%$ credibility). We also discuss forecasts, finding that if we assume $H_0$ is known independently, then 100 BNS events detected by advanced LIGO can constrain $c_M$ to within $\pm0.9$. This is comparable to the current best constraints from cosmology. Similarly, for 100 LIGO A+ BNS detections, it is possible to constrain $c_M$ to $\pm0.5$. When analyzing joint $H_0$ and $c_M$ constraints we find that $\sim 400$ LIGO A+ events are needed to constrain $H_0$ to $1\%$ accuracy. Finally, we discuss the possibility of a nonzero value of $c_M$ biasing standard siren $H_0$ measurements from 100 LIGO A+ detections, and find that $c_M=+1.35$ could bias $H_0$ by 3-4$\sigma$ too low if we incorrectly assume $c_M=0$.

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.03321/full.md

## References

95 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.03321/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.03321