Importance of including small body spin effects in the modelling of extreme and intermediate mass-ratio inspirals
E. A. Huerta, Jonathan R. Gair

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that including small body spin effects in waveform models significantly improves the accuracy of parameter estimation for extreme and intermediate mass-ratio inspirals detected by future gravitational wave observatories like LISA.
Contribution
We develop a comprehensive waveform model incorporating small body spin effects, conservative self-force corrections, and higher-order perturbative effects, enhancing the precision of gravitational wave parameter estimation.
Findings
LISA can measure SMBH and small body spins with high precision for certain mass ranges.
Ignoring conservative corrections leads to significant model errors for mass ratios above 0.0001.
Including up to 2PN order corrections reduces systematic errors to acceptable levels.
Abstract
We explore the ability of future low-frequency gravitational wave detectors to measure the spin of stellar mass and intermediate mass black holes that inspiral onto super-massive Kerr black holes (SMBHs). We develop a kludge waveform model based on the equations of motion derived by Saijo et al. [Phys Rev D 58, 064005, 1998] for spinning BH binaries, augmented with spin-orbit and spin-spin couplings taken from perturbative and post-Newtonian (PN) calculations, and the associated conservative self-force corrections, derived by comparison to PN results. We model the inspiral phase using accurate fluxes which include perturbative corrections for the spin of the inspiralling body, spin-spin couplings and higher-order fits to solutions of the Teukolsky equation. We present results of Monte Carlo simulations of parameter estimation errors and of the model errors that arise when we omit…
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