Abstract

Spatial variations in survey properties due to selection effects generate substantial systematic errors in large-scale structure measurements in optical galaxy surveys on very large scales. On such scales, the statistical sensitivity of optical surveys is also limited by their finite sky coverage. By contrast, gravitational wave (GW) sources appear to be relatively free of these issues, provided the angular sensitivity of GW experiments can be accurately characterized. We quantify the expected cosmological information gain from combining the forecast LSST 3x2pt analysis (combination of three 2-point correlations of galaxy density and weak lensing shear fields) with the large-scale auto-correlation of GW sources from proposed next-generation GW experiments. We find that in ΛCDM and wCDM models, there is no significant improvement in cosmological constraints from combining GW with LSST 3x2pt over LSST alone, due to the large shot noise for the former; however, this combination does enable a ∼6% constraint on the linear galaxy bias of GW sources. More interestingly, the optical-GW data combination provides tight constraints on models with primordial non-Gaussianity (PNG), due to the predicted scale-dependent bias in PNG models on large scales. Assuming that the largest angular scales that LSST will probe are comparable to those in Stage III surveys (), the inclusion of next-generation GW measurements could improve constraints on the PNG parameter by up to a factor of ≃6.6 compared to LSST alone, yielding . These results assume the expected capability of a network of Einstein Telescope-like GW observatories, with a detection rate of 106 events/year. We investigate the sensitivity of our results to different assumptions about future GW detectors as well as different LSST analysis choices.

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