Viewing angle of binary neutron star mergers
Hsin-Yu Chen, Salvatore Vitale, Ramesh Narayan

TL;DR
This paper systematically analyzes how well the viewing angle of binary neutron star mergers can be measured from gravitational wave data, highlighting the importance of electromagnetic counterparts for accurate estimation and implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative assessment of viewing angle measurement accuracy from GW data with and without EM counterpart information, and explores how EM data can improve cosmological parameter estimation.
Findings
50% of systems have viewing angle uncertainty ≤7° with EM counterpart and known redshift.
GW data alone poorly constrains viewing angle unless it is near 90°.
EM data can improve Hubble constant estimates by a factor of 2 to 3.
Abstract
The joint detection of the gravitational wave (GW) GW170817 and its electromagnetic (EM) counterparts GRB170817A and kilonova AT 2017gfo has triggered extensive study of the EM emission of binary neutron star mergers. A parameter which is common to and plays a key role in both the GW and the EM analyses is the viewing angle of the binary's orbit. If a binary is viewed from different angles, the amount of GW energy changes (implying that orientation and distance are correlated) and the EM signatures can vary, depending on the structure of the emission. Information about the viewing angle of the binary orbital plane is therefore crucial to the interpretation of both the GW and the EM data, and can potentially be extracted from either side. In the first part of this study, we present a systematic analysis of how well the viewing angle of binary neutron stars can be measured from the GW…
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.
