Identifying Elusive Electromagnetic Counterparts to Gravitational Wave Mergers: an end-to-end simulation
Samaya Nissanke, Mansi Kasliwal, Alexandra Georgieva

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive simulation of gravitational wave and electromagnetic observations of compact binary mergers, assessing detection capabilities, localization accuracy, and strategies for identifying true EM counterparts amidst false positives.
Contribution
It introduces the first end-to-end simulation analyzing GW sky localization, EM detectability, and false-positive mitigation for binary mergers across multiple GW networks.
Findings
NS binary mergers detectable up to 400-750 Mpc
NS-BH mergers detectable 1.5 times farther
Localization uncertainties vary with network size
Abstract
Combined gravitational-wave (GW) and electromagnetic (EM) observations of compact binary mergers should enable detailed studies of astrophysical processes in the strong-field gravity regime. Networks of GW interferometers have poor angular resolution on the sky and their EM signatures are predicted to be faint. Therefore, a challenging goal will be to unambiguously pinpoint the EM counterparts to GW mergers. We perform the first comprehensive end-to-end simulation that focuses on: i) GW sky localization, distance measures and volume errors with two compact binary populations and four different GW networks, ii) subsequent detectability by a slew of multiwavelength telescopes and, iii) final identification of the merger counterpart amidst a sea of possible astrophysical false-positives. First, we find that double neutron star (NS) binary mergers can be detected out to a maximum distance…
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