On the gravitational wave background from compact binary coalescences in the band of ground-based interferometers
Xing-Jiang Zhu, Eric J. Howell, David G. Blair, Zong-Hong Zhu

TL;DR
This study analyzes the gravitational wave background from compact binary coalescences, incorporating new observational data and analytical waveforms, and assesses detection prospects with current and future ground-based interferometers.
Contribution
It introduces updated models using recent neutron star and black hole mass distributions and includes post-Newtonian effects in the analysis of the GW background.
Findings
Post-Newtonian effects slightly reduce the GW background signal.
The background depends mainly on local coalescence rate and average chirp mass below 100 Hz.
Detection prospects improve with advanced detectors like Einstein Telescope.
Abstract
This paper reports a comprehensive study on the gravitational wave (GW) background from compact binary coalescences. We consider in our calculations newly available observation-based neutron star and black hole mass distributions and complete analytical waveforms that include post-Newtonian amplitude corrections. Our results show that: (i) post-Newtonian effects cause a small reduction in the GW background signal; (ii) below 100 Hz the background depends primarily on the local coalescence rate and the average chirp mass and is independent of the chirp mass distribution; (iii) the effects of cosmic star formation rates and delay times between the formation and merger of binaries are linear below 100 Hz and can be represented by a single parameter within a factor of ~ 2; (iv) a simple power law model of the energy density parameter up to 50-100 Hz is…
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