Investigating the effect of precession on searches for neutron-star-black-hole binaries with Advanced LIGO
I. W. Harry, A. H. Nitz, Duncan A. Brown, A. Lundgren and, Evan Ochsner, D. Keppel

TL;DR
This paper examines how black hole spin precession affects gravitational-wave detection of neutron-star-black-hole binaries and proposes improved waveform models to enhance detection rates.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for creating aligned-spin waveform banks that account for black hole precession effects, improving detection accuracy.
Findings
Neglecting black hole spin precession reduces detection rates by up to 37%.
Aligned-spin waveform banks recover 67-74% of the potential detection rate.
Precession causes poor matches with non-precessing templates, especially in certain parameter regions.
Abstract
The first direct detection of neutron-star-black-hole binaries will likely be made with gravitational-wave observatories. Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo will be able to observe neutron-star-black-hole mergers at a maximum distance of 900Mpc. To acheive this sensitivity, gravitational-wave searches will rely on using a bank of filter waveforms that accurately model the expected gravitational-wave signal. The angular momentum of the black hole is expected to be comparable to the orbital angular momentum. This angular momentum will affect the dynamics of the inspiralling system and alter the phase evolution of the emitted gravitational-wave signal. In addition, if the black hole's angular momentum is not aligned with the orbital angular momentum it will cause the orbital plane of the system to precess. In this work we demonstrate that if the effect of the black hole's angular momentum is…
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