Improved early warning of compact binary mergers using higher modes of gravitational radiation: A population study
Mukesh Kumar Singh, Shasvath J. Kapadia, Md Arif Shaikh, Deep, Chatterjee, Parameswaran Ajith

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that incorporating higher modes of gravitational radiation significantly improves early warning times and sky localization for asymmetric binary mergers across various detector scenarios, aiding electromagnetic follow-up.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive population-based analysis of the benefits of higher-mode inclusion in gravitational wave early-warning for compact binary mergers.
Findings
Higher modes improve localization by a factor of ≥2 for up to 60% of NS-BH systems in O5 scenario.
Early warning time gains of minutes are achievable with 3G detectors for many events.
Localization improvements are significant for asymmetric-mass binaries across multiple detector configurations.
Abstract
A gravitational-wave (GW) early-warning of a compact-binary coalescence event, with a sufficiently tight localisation skymap, would allow telescopes to point in the direction of the potential electromagnetic counterpart before its onset. This will enable astronomers to extract valuable information of the complex astrophysical phenomena triggered around the time of the merger. Use of higher-modes of gravitational radiation, in addition to the dominant mode typically used in templated real-time searches, was recently shown to produce significant improvements in early-warning times and skyarea localisations for a range of asymmetric-mass binaries. In this work, we perform a large-scale study to assess the benefits of this method for a population of compact binary merger observations. In particular, we inject 100,000 such signals in Gaussian noise, with component masses $m_1 \in \left[1, 60…
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