Measuring intermediate mass black hole binaries with advanced gravitational wave detectors
John Veitch, Michael P\"urrer, Ilya Mandel

TL;DR
This study assesses how accurately second-generation gravitational wave detectors can measure parameters of intermediate-mass black hole binaries, highlighting the importance of mass range and signal features for parameter estimation.
Contribution
It introduces efficient reduced-order models for analyzing GW signals from intermediate-mass black hole binaries, improving parameter measurement accuracy across a range of masses and mass ratios.
Findings
Chirp mass is well-measured below ~200 M_
Total mass is more accurate at higher masses due to ringdown dominance
Lower-mass companion's mass is poorly estimated, especially at high total mass
Abstract
We perform a systematic study to explore the accuracy with which the parameters of intermediate-mass black-hole binary systems can be measured from their gravitational wave (GW) signatures using second-generation GW detectors. We make use of the most recent reduced-order models containing inspiral, merger and ringdown signals of aligned-spin effective-one-body waveforms (SEOBNR) to significantly speed up the calculations. We explore the phenomenology of the measurement accuracies for binaries with total masses between 50 and 500 and mass ratios between 0.1 and 1. We find that (i) at total masses below ~200 , where the signal-to-noise-ratio is dominated by the inspiral portion of the signal, the chirp mass parameter can be accurately measured; (ii) at higher masses, the information content is dominated by the ringdown, and total mass is measured more accurately; (iii)…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
