Prospect of Measuring the Cosmic Dipole by Strongly Lensed Gravitational Waves Associated with Galaxy Surveys
Anson Chen, Jun Zhang

TL;DR
This paper explores using strongly lensed gravitational wave events to independently measure the cosmic dipole, potentially confirming or challenging existing electromagnetic observations and offering a new cosmological probe.
Contribution
It proposes a novel method to measure the cosmic dipole using strongly lensed GWs and forecasts its feasibility with future detectors like Einstein Telescope and Cosmic Explorer.
Findings
A detectable dipole magnitude consistent with CMB measurements can be measured with 10 years of data.
Combining multiple lensing configurations improves the constraints on the dipole.
Systematic uncertainties need to be mitigated for precise measurements.
Abstract
The cosmic dipole observed in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is traditionally interpreted as being caused by the observer's motion relative to the background. However, tensions with dipole measurements from radio galaxy counts motivate the need for independent probes. This work investigates the feasibility of using strongly lensed gravitational wave (GW) events to measure the cosmic dipole. Strongly lensed GWs produce multiple time-delayed images, which can be used to infer the distances to both the lens and the source. These distances, associated with the observed redshifts of the lens and the source from galaxy catalogues, encode information about the background cosmology and cosmic dipole effects. By reconstructing a statistical sample of doubly lensed GW events based on the singular isothermal sphere lens model, the cosmic dipole can be estimated jointly with background…
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