Detecting gravitational lensing in hierarchical triples in galactic nuclei with space-borne gravitational-wave observatories
Hang Yu, Yijun Wang, Brian Seymour, Yanbei Chen

TL;DR
This paper explores how gravitational lensing and orbital dynamics of binary black holes near supermassive black holes can be detected via space-borne gravitational-wave observatories, enabling precise SMBH mass measurements and tests of gravitational theories.
Contribution
It introduces a method to detect lensing signatures in GW signals from BBHs near SMBHs, improving SMBH mass estimation and testing gravitational theories.
Findings
3-10% chance of detecting strong lensing signatures with LISA/TianGO
SMBH mass can be measured with a fractional error of ~10^-4
Lensing effects enable detection of de Sitter precession at longer periods
Abstract
Stellar-mass binary black holes (BBHs) may merge in the vicinity of a supermassive black hole (SMBH). It is suggested that the gravitational-wave (GW) emitted by a BBH has a high probability to be lensed by the SMBH if the BBH's orbit around the SMBH (i.e., the outer orbit) has a period of less than a year and is less than the duration of observation of the BBH by a space-borne GW observatory. For such a BBH + SMBH triple system, the de Sitter precession of the BBH's orbital plane is also significant. In this work, we thus study GW waveforms emitted by the BBH and then modulated by the SMBH due to effects including Doppler shift, de Sitter precession, and gravitational lensing. We show specifically that for an outer orbital period of 0.1 yr and an SMBH mass of , there is a 3\%-10\% chance for the standard, strong lensing signatures to be detectable by space-borne GW…
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