Hubble Constant Measurement from Three Large-separation Quasars Strongly Lensed by Galaxy Clusters
Abstract
Tension between cosmic microwave background-based and distance ladder-based determinations of the Hubble constant H 0 motivates the pursuit of independent methods that are not subject to the same systematic effects. A promising alternative, proposed by Refsdal in 1964, relies on the inverse scaling of H 0 with the delay between the arrival times of at least two images of a strongly lensed variable source such as a quasar. To date, Refsdal's method has mostly been applied to quasars lensed by individual galaxies rather than by galaxy clusters. Using the three quasars strongly lensed by galaxy clusters (SDSS J1004+4112, SDSS J1029+2623, and SDSS J2222+2745) that have both multiband Hubble Space Telescope data and published time delay measurements, we derive H 0, accounting for the systematic and statistical sources of uncertainty. While a single time delay measurement does not yield a well-constrained H 0 value, analyzing the systems together tightens the constraint. Combining the six time delays measured in the three cluster-lensed quasars gives H 0 = 74.1 ± 8.0 km s-1 Mpc-1. To reach 1% uncertainty in H 0, we estimate that a sample size of order of 620 time delay measurements of similar quality as those from SDSS J1004+4112, SDSS J1029+2623, and SDSS J2222+2745 would be needed. Improving the lens modeling uncertainties by a factor of two and a half may reduce the needed sample size to 100 time delays, potentially reachable in the next decade.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- December 2023
- DOI:
- 10.3847/1538-4357/ad045a
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2301.11240
- Bibcode:
- 2023ApJ...959..134N
- Keywords:
-
- Gravitational lensing;
- Cosmology;
- Hubble constant;
- Quasars;
- Galaxy clusters;
- 670;
- 343;
- 758;
- 1319;
- 584;
- Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 14 pages, 2 figures