Measuring parameters of massive black hole binaries with partially aligned spins
Ryan N. Lang, Scott A. Hughes, Neil J. Cornish

TL;DR
This paper investigates how partial spin alignment in massive black hole binaries affects parameter measurement accuracy with LISA, highlighting the importance of higher harmonics in waveform modeling to mitigate degradation caused by reduced precession.
Contribution
It demonstrates that higher harmonics can compensate for the loss of precession effects in partially aligned spins, improving parameter estimation accuracy.
Findings
Weakened precession degrades sky localization and distance measurement.
Higher harmonics significantly improve parameter estimation in aligned-spin binaries.
Parameter measurement can match that of randomly oriented spins when higher harmonics are included.
Abstract
The future space-based gravitational wave detector LISA will be able to measure parameters of coalescing massive black hole binaries, often to extremely high accuracy. Previous work has demonstrated that the black hole spins can have a strong impact on the accuracy of parameter measurement. Relativistic spin-induced precession modulates the waveform in a manner which can break degeneracies between parameters, in principle significantly improving how well they are measured. Recent studies have indicated, however, that spin precession may be weak for an important subset of astrophysical binary black holes: those in which the spins are aligned due to interactions with gas. In this paper, we examine how well a binary's parameters can be measured when its spins are partially aligned and compare results using waveforms that include higher post-Newtonian harmonics to those that are truncated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
