TY - JOUR
T1 - TDCOSMO
T2 - I. An exploration of systematic uncertainties in the inference of H0 from time-delay cosmography
AU - Millon, M.
AU - Galan, A.
AU - Courbin, F.
AU - Treu, T.
AU - Suyu, S. H.
AU - Ding, X.
AU - Birrer, S.
AU - Chen, G. C.-F.
AU - Shajib, A. J.
AU - Sluse, D.
AU - Wong, K. C.
AU - Agnello, A.
AU - Auger, M. W.
AU - Buckley-Geer, E. J.
AU - Chan, J. H. H.
AU - Collett, T.
AU - Fassnacht, C. D.
AU - Hilbert, S.
AU - Koopmans, L. V. E.
AU - Motta, V.
AU - Mukherjee, S.
AU - Rusu, C. E.
AU - Sonnenfeld, A.
AU - Spiniello, C.
AU - Van de Vyvere, L.
PY - 2020/7/1
Y1 - 2020/7/1
N2 - Time-delay cosmography of lensed quasars has achieved 2.4% precision on
the measurement of the Hubble constant, H0. As part of an
ongoing effort to uncover and control systematic uncertainties, we
investigate three potential sources: 1- stellar kinematics, 2-
line-of-sight effects, and 3- the deflector mass model. To meet this
goal in a quantitative way, we reproduced the H0LiCOW/SHARP/STRIDES
(hereafter TDCOSMO) procedures on a set of real and simulated data, and
we find the following. First, stellar kinematics cannot be a dominant
source of error or bias since we find that a systematic change of 10% of
measured velocity dispersion leads to only a 0.7% shift on H0
from the seven lenses analyzed by TDCOSMO. Second, we find no bias to
arise from incorrect estimation of the line-of-sight effects. Third, we
show that elliptical composite (stars + dark matter halo), power-law,
and cored power-law mass profiles have the flexibility to yield a broad
range in H0 values. However, the TDCOSMO procedures that
model the data with both composite and power-law mass profiles are
informative. If the models agree, as we observe in real systems owing to
the "bulge-halo" conspiracy, H0 is recovered precisely and
accurately by both models. If the two models disagree, as in the case of
some pathological models illustrated here, the TDCOSMO procedure either
discriminates between them through the goodness of fit, or it accounts
for the discrepancy in the final error bars provided by the analysis.
This conclusion is consistent with a reanalysis of six of the TDCOSMO
(real) lenses: the composite model yields H0 =
74.0-1.8+1.7 km s-1 Mpc-1,
while the power-law model yields 74.2-1.6+1.6 km
s-1 Mpc-1. In conclusion, we find no evidence of
bias or errors larger than the current statistical uncertainties
reported by TDCOSMO.
AB - Time-delay cosmography of lensed quasars has achieved 2.4% precision on
the measurement of the Hubble constant, H0. As part of an
ongoing effort to uncover and control systematic uncertainties, we
investigate three potential sources: 1- stellar kinematics, 2-
line-of-sight effects, and 3- the deflector mass model. To meet this
goal in a quantitative way, we reproduced the H0LiCOW/SHARP/STRIDES
(hereafter TDCOSMO) procedures on a set of real and simulated data, and
we find the following. First, stellar kinematics cannot be a dominant
source of error or bias since we find that a systematic change of 10% of
measured velocity dispersion leads to only a 0.7% shift on H0
from the seven lenses analyzed by TDCOSMO. Second, we find no bias to
arise from incorrect estimation of the line-of-sight effects. Third, we
show that elliptical composite (stars + dark matter halo), power-law,
and cored power-law mass profiles have the flexibility to yield a broad
range in H0 values. However, the TDCOSMO procedures that
model the data with both composite and power-law mass profiles are
informative. If the models agree, as we observe in real systems owing to
the "bulge-halo" conspiracy, H0 is recovered precisely and
accurately by both models. If the two models disagree, as in the case of
some pathological models illustrated here, the TDCOSMO procedure either
discriminates between them through the goodness of fit, or it accounts
for the discrepancy in the final error bars provided by the analysis.
This conclusion is consistent with a reanalysis of six of the TDCOSMO
(real) lenses: the composite model yields H0 =
74.0-1.8+1.7 km s-1 Mpc-1,
while the power-law model yields 74.2-1.6+1.6 km
s-1 Mpc-1. In conclusion, we find no evidence of
bias or errors larger than the current statistical uncertainties
reported by TDCOSMO.
KW - gravitational lensing: strong
KW - methods: data analysis
U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/201937351
DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/201937351
M3 - Article
SN - 0004-6361
VL - 639
JO - Astronomy & Astrophysics
JF - Astronomy & Astrophysics
ER -