Detecting Double Neutron Stars with LISA
Mike Y. M. Lau, Ilya Mandel, Alejandro Vigna-G\'omez, Coenraad J., Neijssel, Simon Stevenson, Alberto Sesana

TL;DR
This paper estimates the number and properties of double neutron star systems detectable by the LISA space interferometer, highlighting their potential to inform astrophysics and formation theories.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions of LISA's ability to detect and localize double neutron star systems, including their orbital characteristics and implications for astrophysics.
Findings
Approximately 35 DNSs detectable with SNR > 8 over four years.
LISA will localize sources to a few arcminutes, aiding follow-up studies.
Most detected DNSs will be Galactic, with some in the LMC and SMC.
Abstract
We estimate the properties of the double neutron star (DNS) population that will be observable by the planned space-based interferometer LISA. By following the gravitational radiation driven evolution of DNSs generated from rapid population synthesis of massive binary stars, we estimate that around 35 DNSs will accumulate a signal-to-noise ratio above 8 over a four-year LISA mission. The observed population mainly comprises Galactic DNSs (94 per cent), but detections in the LMC (5 per cent) and SMC (1 per cent) may also be expected. The median orbital frequency of detected DNSs is expected to be 0.8 mHz, and many of them will be eccentric (median eccentricity of ). The orbital properties will provide insights into DNS progenitors and formation channels. LISA is expected to localise these DNSs to a typical angular resolution of , with best-constrained sources localised to…
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