# Two-harmonic approximation for gravitational waveforms from precessing   binaries

**Authors:** Stephen Fairhurst, Rhys Green, Charlie Hoy, Mark Hannam, Alistair Muir

arXiv: 1908.05707 · 2020-07-22

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a two-harmonic approximation method for modeling gravitational waveforms from precessing binary black holes, simplifying analysis and aiding detection of precession effects in gravitational-wave signals.

## Contribution

It proposes a novel two-harmonic approximation for precessing binary waveforms, enabling easier identification of precession effects and improving search strategies.

## Key findings

- Waveforms can be approximated by two dominant harmonics.
- Precession effects are identifiable through harmonic beating.
- The method simplifies detection and characterization of precessing binaries.

## Abstract

Binary-black-hole orbits precess when the black-hole spins are mis-aligned with the binary's orbital angular momentum. The apparently complicated dynamics can in most cases be described as simple precession of the orbital angular momentum about an approximately fixed total angular momentum. However, the imprint of the precession on the observed gravitational-wave signal is yet more complicated, with a non-trivial time-varying dependence on black-hole dynamics, the binary's orientation and the detector polarization. As a result, it is difficult to predict under which conditions precession effects are measurable in gravitational-wave observations, and their impact on both signal detection and source characterization. We show that the observed waveform can be simplified by decomposing it as a power series in a new precession parameter $b = \tan(\beta/2)$, where $\beta$ is the opening angle between the orbital and total angular momenta. The power series is made up of five harmonics, with frequencies that differ by the binary's precession frequency, and individually do not exhibit amplitude and phase modulations. In many cases, the waveform can be well approximated by the two leading harmonics. In this approximation we are able to obtain a simple picture of precession as caused by the beating of two waveforms of similar frequency. This enables us to identify regions of the parameter space where precession is likely to have an observable effect on the waveform, and to propose a new approach to searching for signals from precessing binaries, based upon the two-harmonic approximation.

## Full text

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## Figures

15 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.05707/full.md

## References

86 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.05707/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.05707