Localizing coalescing massive black hole binaries with gravitational waves
Ryan N. Lang, Scott A. Hughes

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how gravitational wave observations from space-based detectors like LISA can localize massive black hole binaries in three dimensions, with accuracy improving as the merger approaches, considering effects like lensing and spin precession.
Contribution
It provides a detailed study of the evolution of localization accuracy over time before merger, highlighting the impact of spin precession on improving early localization.
Findings
Localization within ~10 deg^2 a month before merger at z=1
Distance measurement accuracy of a few percent near merger
Spin precession significantly enhances early localization precision
Abstract
Massive black hole binary coalescences are prime targets for space-based gravitational wave (GW) observatories such as {\it LISA}. GW measurements can localize the position of a coalescing binary on the sky to an ellipse with a major axis of a few tens of arcminutes to a few degrees, depending on source redshift, and a minor axis which is times smaller. Neglecting weak gravitational lensing, the GWs would also determine the source's luminosity distance to better than percent accuracy for close sources, degrading to several percent for more distant sources. Weak lensing cannot, in fact, be neglected and is expected to limit the accuracy with which distances can be fixed to errors no less than a few percent. Assuming a well-measured cosmology, the source's redshift could be inferred with similar accuracy. GWs alone can thus pinpoint a binary to a three-dimensional ``pixel'' which…
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