TL;DR
This paper explores strategies to measure the Hubble constant precisely using strong lensing time delays, aiming to resolve current tensions without relying on assumptions about lens mass profiles.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical framework to improve H$_0$ measurement precision without mass profile assumptions, and forecasts future improvements with larger lens samples.
Findings
Current data yields 8 ext% precision without profile assumptions.
Adding external data improves precision to 5 ext%, assuming same population.
Future surveys could achieve 1.2 ext% precision, resolving H$_0$ tension.
Abstract
Strong lensing time delays can measure the Hubble constant H independent of any other probe. Assuming commonly used forms for the radial mass density profile of the lenses, a 2\% precision has been achieved with 7 Time-Delay Cosmography (TDCOSMO) lenses, in tension with the H from the cosmic microwave background. However, without assumptions on the radial mass density profile -- and relying exclusively on stellar kinematics to break the mass-sheet degeneracy -- the precision drops to 8\% with the current data of the 7 TDCOSMO lenses, insufficient to resolve the H tension. With the addition of external information from 33 Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) lenses, the precision improves to 5\%, {\it if} the deflectors of TDCOSMO and SLACS lenses are drawn from the same population. We investigate the prospects to improve the precision of time-delay cosmography without relying on mass…
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