TDCOSMO

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 703 (2025) a117

Authors:

Shawn Knabel, Pritom Mozumdar, Anowar J Shajib, Tommaso Treu, Michele Cappellari, Chiara Spiniello, Simon Birrer

Abstract:

The stellar velocity dispersion ( σ ) of massive elliptical galaxies is a key ingredient in breaking the mass-sheet degeneracy and obtaining precise and accurate cosmography from gravitational time delays. The relative uncertainty on the Hubble constant H 0 is double the relative error on σ . Therefore, time-delay cosmography imposes much more demanding requirements on the precision and accuracy of σ than galaxy studies. While precision can be achieved with an adequate signal-to-noise ratio (S/N), the accuracy critically depends on key factors such as the elemental abundance and temperature of stellar templates, flux calibration, and wavelength ranges. We carried out a detailed study of the problem using multiple sets of galaxy spectra of massive elliptical galaxies with S/N ∼ 30–160 Å −1 , along with state-of-the-art empirical and semi-empirical stellar libraries and stellar population synthesis templates. We show that the choice of stellar library is generally the dominant source of residual systematic errors. We propose a general recipe for mitigating and accounting for residual uncertainties. We show that a sub-percent level of accuracy can be achieved on individual spectra with our data quality, which we subsequently validated with simulated mock datasets. The covariance between velocity dispersions measured for a sample of spectra can also be reduced to sub-percent levels. We recommend this recipe for all applications that require high precision and accurate stellar kinematics. Thus, we have made all the software publicly available to facilitate its implementation. This recipe will also be used in future TDCOSMO collaboration papers.

MIGHTEE-H i: the M H i - M * relation of massive galaxies and the H i mass function at 0.25 < z < 0.5

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 544:2 (2025) 1710-1731

Authors:

Hengxing Pan, Matt J Jarvis, Ian Heywood, Tariq Yasin, Natasha Maddox, Mario G Santos, Maarten Baes, Anastasia A Ponomareva, Sambatriniaina HA Rajohnson

Abstract:

The relationship between the already formed stellar mass in a galaxy and the gas reservoir of neutral atomic hydrogen, is a key element in our understanding of how gas is turned into stars in galaxy haloes. In this paper, we measure the relation based on a stellar-mass selected sample at and the MeerKAT International GHz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration-H i Data Release 1 spectral data. Using a powerful Bayesian stacking technique, for the first time we are also able to measure the underlying bivariate distribution of H i mass and stellar mass of galaxies with M, finding that an asymmetric underlying H i distribution is strongly preferred by our complete samples. We define the concepts of the average of the logarithmic H i mass, , and the logarithmic average of the H i mass, , and find that the difference between and can be as large as 0.5 dex for the preferred asymmetric H i distribution. We observe shallow slopes in the underlying scaling relations, suggesting the presence of an upper H i mass limit beyond which a galaxy can no longer retain further H i gas. From our bivariate distribution we also infer the H i mass function at this redshift and find tentative evidence for a decrease of 2–10 times in the comoving space density of the most H i massive galaxies up to .

Cosmological constraints from the angular power spectrum and bispectrum of luminous red galaxies and CMB lensing

(2025)

Authors:

Francesco Verdiani, Lea Harscouet, Matteo Zennaro, David Alonso, Boryana Hadzhiyska

Limits on the ejecta mass during the search for kilonovae associated with neutron star-black hole mergers: A case study of S230518h, GW230529, S230627c and the low-significance candidate S240422ed

Physical Review D American Physical Society (APS) 112:8 (2025) 083002

Authors:

M Pillas, S Antier, K Ackley, T Ahumada, D Akl, L de Almeida, S Anand, C Andrade, I Andreoni, KA Bostroem, M Bulla, E Burns, T Cabrera, S Chang, H Choi, B O’Connor, MW Coughlin, W Corradi, AR Gibbs, T Dietrich, D Dornic, J-G Ducoin, P-A Duverne, H-B Eggenstein, M Freeberg, M Dyer, M Fausnaugh, Wen-fai Fong, F Foucart, D Frostig, N Guessoum, Vaidehi Gupta, P Hello, G Hosseinzadeh, L Hu, T Hussenot-Desenonges, M Im, R Jayaraman, M Jeong, V Karambelkar, M Kasliwal, S Kim, CD Kilpatrick, N Kochiashvili, S Karpov, K Kunnumkai, M Lamoureux, CU Lee, N Lourie, J Lyman, M Mašek, F Magnani, G Mo, M Molham, AH Nitz, M Nicholl, F Navarete, K Noysena, D O’Neill, GSH Paek, A Palmese, R Poggiani, T Pradier, O Pyshna, Y Rajabov, JC Rastinejad, DJ Sand, P Shawhan, M Shrestha, R Simcoe, SJ Smartt, D Steeghs, R Stein, HF Stevance, A Takey, M Sun, A Toivonen, D Turpin, K Ulaczyk, A Wold, T Wouters

Abstract:

Neutron star-black hole (NSBH) mergers, detectable via their gravitational-wave (GW) emission, are expected to produce kilonovae (KNe). Four NSBH candidates have been identified and followed-up by more than fifty instruments since the start of the fourth GW observing run (O4), in May 2023, up to July 2024; however, no confirmed associated KN has been detected. This study evaluates ejecta properties from multimessenger observations to understand the absence of detectable KN: we use GW public information and joint observations taken from 05.2023 to 07.2024 (LVK, ATLAS, DECam, GECKO, GOTO, GRANDMA, SAGUARO, TESS, WINTER, ZTF). First, our analysis on follow-up observation strategies shows that, on average, more than 50% of the simulated KNe associated with NSBH mergers reach their peak luminosity around one day after merger in the g, r, i- bands, which is not necessarily covered for each NSBH GW candidate. We also analyze the trade-off between observation efficiency and the intrinsic properties of the KN emission, to understand the impact on how these constraints affect our ability to detect the KN, and underlying ejecta properties for each GW candidate. In particular, we can only confirm the kilonova was not missed for 1% of the GW230529 and S230627c sky localization region, given the large sky localization error of GW230529 and the large distance for S230627c and, their respective KN faint luminosities. More constraining, for S230518h, we infer the dynamical ejecta and postmerger disk wind ejecta mdyn,mwind<0.03M⊙ and the viewing angle θ>25°. Similarly, the nonastrophysical origin of S240422ed is likely further confirmed by the fact that we would have detected even a faint KN at the time and presumed distance of the S240422ed event candidate, within a minimum 45% credible region of the sky area, that can be larger depending on the KN scenario.

Infrared spectral signatures of light r-process elements in kilonovae

(2025)

Authors:

Anders Jerkstrand, Quentin Pognan, Smaranika Banerjee, Nicholas Sterling, Jon Grumer, Niamh Ferguson, Keith Butler, James Gillanders, Stephen Smartt, Kyohei Kawaguchi, Blanka Vilagos