Pushing spectral siren cosmology into the third-generation era: a blinded mock data challenge
Matteo Tagliazucchi, Michele Moresco, Alessandro Agapito, Michele Mancarella, Sarah Ferraiuolo, Simone Mastrogiovanni, Nicola Borghi, Francesco Pannarale, Daniele Bonacorsi

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the scalability and robustness of spectral siren cosmology pipelines using simulated third-generation GW data, demonstrating consistent parameter recovery and forecasting precise cosmological constraints.
Contribution
It presents a blinded mock data challenge testing three pipelines on large simulated ET datasets, validating their performance and establishing a framework for future spectral siren cosmology.
Findings
All pipelines recover consistent cosmological parameters.
Achieved 2.4% precision on H(z) at z~1.5.
Forecasted 10% on H0 and 26% on Ω_m,0 constraints.
Abstract
Gravitational wave (GW) spectral sirens offer a promising method for measuring cosmological parameters using GW data only - without relying on external redshift information such as electromagnetic counterparts or galaxy catalogs - by exploiting distributional features in the population of GW sources. The advent of third-generation detectors like the Einstein Telescope (ET) will provide catalogs three orders of magnitudes larger than current ones, raising questions about the scalability and robustness of existing inference pipelines. We present a blinded mock data challenge that tests three public pipelines with distinct numerical implementations, namely, , , and , on simulated ET observations containing the best binary black hole mergers that can be observed in 1 year. We assess their computational performance,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
