Impact of Higher-order Modes on the Detection of Binary Black Hole Coalescences
Larne Pekowsky, James Healy, Deirdre Shoemaker, Pablo Laguna

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how including higher-order modes in waveform models can improve gravitational wave detection of binary black hole mergers, especially for unequal mass and spinning systems, by analyzing waveform mismatches and detection volume gains.
Contribution
It demonstrates the potential detection volume increase by incorporating higher modes in waveform templates, especially for complex binary configurations.
Findings
Mismatch can be large for quadrupole-only models, especially in certain orientations.
Including higher modes can increase detection volume by about 30%.
Mismatch is largest for signals with less radiated energy, reducing sensitivity.
Abstract
The inspiral and merger of black-hole binary systems are a promising source of gravitational waves. The most effective method to look for a signal with a well understood waveform, such as the binary black hole signal, is matched filtering against a library of model waveforms. Current model waveforms are comprised solely of the dominant radiation mode, the quadrupole mode, although it is known that there can be significant power in the higher-order modes. The binary black hole waveforms produced by numerical relativity are accurate through late inspiral, merger, and ringdown and include the higher-order modes. The available numerical-relativity waveforms span an increasing portion of the physical parameter space of unequal mass, spin and precession. In this paper, we investigate the degree to which gravitational-wave searches could be improved by the inclusion of higher modes in the…
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