Cosmology with Love: Measuring the Hubble constant using neutron star universal relations
Deep Chatterjee, Abhishek Hegade K. R., Gilbert Holder, Daniel E., Holz, Scott Perkins, Kent Yagi, Nicol\'as Yunes

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel gravitational-wave based method to measure the Hubble constant using neutron star binary Love relations, achieving competitive accuracy in current and future detector scenarios without electromagnetic counterparts.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach combining binary Love relations with gravitational-wave data to directly estimate redshift and the Hubble constant without electromagnetic counterparts.
Findings
Method achieves ~30% accuracy with current detectors.
Accuracy improves to <10% with third-generation detectors.
Potential for precise cosmology with future gravitational-wave observations.
Abstract
Gravitational-wave cosmology began in 2017 with the observation of the gravitational waves emitted in the merger of two neutron stars, and the coincident observation of the electromagnetic emission that followed. Although only a measurement of the Hubble constant was achieved, future observations may yield more precise measurements either through other coincident events or through cross correlation of gravitational-wave events with galaxy catalogs. Here, we implement a new way to measure the Hubble constant without an electromagnetic counterpart and through the use of the binary Love relations. These relations govern the tidal deformabilities of neutron stars in an equation-of-state insensitive way. Importantly, the Love relations depend on the component masses of the binary in the source frame. Since the gravitational-wave phase and amplitude depend on the chirp mass in the…
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