Short Gamma-Ray Bursts and Gravitational-Wave Observations from Eccentric Compact Binaries
Wei-Wei Tan, Xi-Long Fan, F. Y. Wang (NJU)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how orbital eccentricity in compact binary mergers affects gravitational wave spectra and detection rates, revealing that high eccentricities suppress signals and influence the likelihood of observing GW-SGRB events.
Contribution
It introduces the impact of residual eccentricity on GW spectra and detection rates, highlighting differences from circular orbit assumptions in gravitational wave analysis.
Findings
SGWB power spectra are suppressed at low frequencies for eccentric binaries.
High residual eccentricities reduce GW detection prospects at ~100 Hz.
BBH progenitors yield significantly higher GW-SGRB event rates than BNS and NSBH.
Abstract
Mergers of compact binaries, such as binary neutron stars (BNSs), neutron star-black hole binaries (NSBHs), and binary black holes (BBHs), are expected to be the best candidates for the sources of gravitational waves (GWs) and the leading theoretical models for short gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs). Based on the observations of SGRBs, we could derive the merger rates of these compact binaries, and study the stochastic GW backgrounds (SGWBs) or the co-detection rates of GWs associate with SGRBs (GW-SGRBs). But before that, the most important thing is to derive the GW spectrum from a single GW source. Usually, GW spectrum from a circular orbit binary is assumed. However, observations of the large spatial offsets of SGRBs from their host galaxies imply that SGRB progenitors may be formed by the dynamical processes, and will merge with residual eccentricities. The orbital eccentricity has…
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.
