A Program for Multi-Messenger Standard Siren Cosmology in the Era of LIGO A+, Rubin Observatory, and Beyond
Hsin-Yu Chen, Philip S. Cowperthwaite, Brian D. Metzger, Edo Berger

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the future potential of multi-messenger standard siren cosmology using gravitational-wave and electromagnetic observations across upcoming observatories, highlighting how these can constrain key cosmological parameters like H_0, Omega_m, and w_0.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive forecast of how next-generation GW detectors and electromagnetic follow-up can improve cosmological measurements over the next decades.
Findings
One year of A+ and VRO can constrain H_0 to percent-level accuracy.
Voyager-era observations can begin constraining Omega_m.
Cosmic Explorer and gamma-ray satellites can jointly constrain Omega_m and w_0 to 15-20%.
Abstract
The most promising variation of the standard siren technique combines gravitational-wave (GW) data for binary neutron star (BNS) mergers with redshift measurements enabled by their electromagnetic (EM) counterparts, to constrain cosmological parameters such as , , and . Here we evaluate the near- and long-term prospects of multi-messenger cosmology in the era of future GW observatories: Advanced LIGO Plus (A+, 2025), Voyager-like detectors (2030s), and Cosmic Explorer-like detectors (CE, 2035 and beyond). We show that the BNS horizon distance of Mpc for A+ is well-matched to the sensitivity of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory (VRO) for kilonova detections. We find that one year of joint A+ and VRO observations will constrain the value of to percent-level precision, given a small investment of VRO time dedicated to target-of-opportunity GW follow-up.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
