Measurement Accuracy of Inspiraling Eccentric Neutron Star and Black Hole Binaries Using Gravitational Waves
L\'aszl\'o Gond\'an, Bence Kocsis

TL;DR
This paper evaluates how accurately gravitational wave detectors can measure parameters of eccentric inspiraling binaries, including neutron star and black hole pairs, and discusses the implications for understanding their astrophysical origins.
Contribution
It extends previous studies to a wider range of binary masses and demonstrates the detector network's capability to identify orbital eccentricities and improve parameter estimation.
Findings
Measurement error of eccentricity at 10 Hz is very small for nearby sources.
Eccentricity can be detected if it exceeds approximately 0.08 for typical events.
Eccentric waveform identification can significantly improve chirp mass measurement accuracy.
Abstract
In a recent paper, we determined the measurement accuracy of physical parameters for eccentric, precessing, non-spinning, inspiraling, stellar-mass black hole - black hole (BH-BH) binaries for the upcoming second-generation LIGO/VIRGO/KAGRA detector network at design sensitivity using the Fisher matrix method. Here we extend that study to a wide range of binary masses including neutron star - neutron star (NS-NS), NS-BH, and BH-BH binaries with BH masses up to . The measurement error of eccentricity at a gravitational-wave (GW) frequency of is in the range for NS-NS, NS-BH, and BH-BH binaries at a luminosity distance of if . For events with masses and distances similar to the detected 10 GW transients, we show that nonzero orbital eccentricities may be…
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