Constraining Extragalactic Proper Motion with Gaia Astrometry
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The Solar System's secular motion with respect to the cosmic microwave background (CMB) rest frame is inferred from the CMB dipole and should induce a tiny, coherent apparent drift in the positions of nearby galaxies, referred to as the extragalactic proper motion. We test the feasibility of a purely geometric measurement of this effect by combining Gaia DR2 and DR3 astrometry with low-redshift spectroscopic galaxy catalogs to build a large, full-sky sample of $67,173$ galaxies. Although we do not obtain a statistically significant detection of the expected dipole signal, we place the tightest constraint to date on the extragalactic proper motion $\bar{\pi}$. Using galaxies with comoving distance $D>5 {\, \rm Mpc}$, we also place the tightest constraints on cosmic extragalactic proper motion $\bar{\pi}_{\rm cosmic}$, with uncertainty $\sim 10\times$ the measured CMB dipole value. Our $1\sigma$ uncertainty on the near field extragalactic proper motion $\bar{\pi}_{\rm nf}$ is approximately $\sim 1.3\times$ the expected CMB measurement, demonstrating that Gaia astrometry is approaching the sensitivity required for a direct detection of near field Hubble constant in future releases.
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