Constraining the orbital eccentricity of inspiralling compact binary systems with Advanced LIGO
Marc Favata, Chunglee Kim, K. G. Arun, JeongCho Kim, Hyung Won Lee

TL;DR
This paper explores how well Advanced LIGO can measure the orbital eccentricity of inspiralling compact binaries, highlighting the importance of low-frequency sensitivity and introducing the eccentric chirp mass parameter.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of eccentricity measurement limits, introduces the eccentric chirp mass, and compares Fisher matrix and MCMC methods for parameter estimation.
Findings
Lowering the low frequency cutoff improves eccentricity measurement.
Eccentric chirp mass explains degeneracy between mass and eccentricity.
Bias occurs when eccentric signals are analyzed with circular templates.
Abstract
The detection of ~50 coalescing compact binaries with the Advanced LIGO and Virgo detectors has allowed us to test general relativity, constrain merger rates, and look for evidence of tidal effects, compact object spins, higher waveform modes, and black hole ringdowns. An effect that has not yet been confidently detected is binary eccentricity, which might be present in a small fraction of binaries formed dynamically. Here we discuss general limits on eccentricity that can, in-principle, be placed on all types of compact object binaries by a detector operating at the design sensitivity of Advanced LIGO. Using a post-Newtonian model for gravitational-wave phasing valid in the small eccentricity regime, we assess the relative measurement error for eccentricity for a variety of spinning and non-spinning binaries. Errors and correlations involving the mass and spin parameters are also…
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