Parameter estimation for heavy binary-black holes with networks of second-generation gravitational-wave detectors
Salvatore Vitale, Ryan Lynch, Vivien Raymond, Riccardo Sturani, John, Veitch, Philp Graff

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the expected uncertainties in parameter estimation for heavy binary black hole mergers with advanced gravitational-wave detectors, highlighting the challenges and potential for measuring masses and spins.
Contribution
It provides a detailed forecast of mass and spin measurement accuracies for heavy BBH systems using second-generation detectors, emphasizing the limitations and possibilities.
Findings
Mass uncertainties around 40% for typical heavy BBH.
Spin magnitude uncertainties often above 0.7, with effective spin better constrained.
Large aligned spins can be measured with small uncertainty in heavy BBH.
Abstract
The era of gravitational-wave astronomy has started with the discovery of the binary black hole coalescences (BBH) GW150914 and GW151226 by the LIGO instruments. These systems allowed for the first direct measurement of masses and spins of black holes. The component masses in each of the systems have been estimated with uncertainties of over 10\%, with only weak constraints on the spin magnitude and orientation. In this paper we show how these uncertainties will be typical for this type of source when using advanced detectors. Focusing in particular on heavy BBH of masses similar to GW150914, we find that typical uncertainties in the estimation of the source-frame component masses will be around 40\%. We also find that for most events the magnitude of the component spins will be estimated poorly: for only 10\% of the systems the uncertainties in the spin magnitude of the primary…
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