Survey of gravitational wave memory in intermediate mass ratio binaries
Tousif Islam, Scott E. Field, Gaurav Khanna, Niels Warburton

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the gravitational wave memory effect in intermediate mass ratio binaries, focusing on its phenomenology, detectability, and the influence of system parameters, with implications for future gravitational wave observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of GW memory in IMRIs, including higher modes and spin effects, using perturbation theory calibrated to numerical relativity, which is novel for this mass ratio regime.
Findings
Eccentricity adds features but doesn't affect detectability significantly.
Including higher modes increases SNR by about 7%.
High spin enhances displacement memory SNR, but spin memory remains hard to detect.
Abstract
The non-linear gravitational wave (GW) memory effect is a distinct prediction in general relativity. While the effect has been well studied for comparable mass binaries, it has mostly been overlooked for intermediate mass ratio inspirals (IMRIs). We offer a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenology and detectability of memory effects, including contributions from subdominant harmonic modes, in heavy IMRIs consisting of a stellar mass black hole and an intermediate mass black hole. When formed through hierarchical mergers, for example when a GW190521-like remnant captures a stellar mass black hole, IMRI systems have a large total mass, large spin on the primary, and possibly residual eccentricity; features that potentially raise the prospect for memory detection. We compute both the displacement and spin non-linear GW memory from the gravitational waveforms computed within a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
