The curious case of GW200129: interplay between spin-precession inference and data-quality issues
Ethan Payne, Sophie Hourihane, Jacob Golomb, Rhiannon Udall, Derek, Davis, Katerina Chatziioannou

TL;DR
This paper examines the evidence for spin-precession in GW200129, revealing that data quality issues and glitch modeling significantly influence the inference, emphasizing the importance of data quality in subtle gravitational wave signal analyses.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the support for spin-precession in GW200129 is highly sensitive to glitch subtraction methods and data quality, highlighting the need for careful data analysis in such inferences.
Findings
Data quality issues affect spin-precession inference.
Glitch modeling impacts the interpretation of GW200129.
Virgo data shows inconsistencies with LIGO observations.
Abstract
Measurement of spin-precession in black hole binary mergers observed with gravitational waves is an exciting milestone as it relates to both general relativistic dynamics and astrophysical binary formation scenarios. In this study, we revisit the evidence for spin-precession in GW200129 and localize its origin to data in LIGO Livingston in the 20--50\,Hz frequency range where the signal amplitude is lower than expected from a non-precessing binary given all the other data. These data are subject to known data quality issues as a glitch was subtracted from the detector's strain data. The lack of evidence for spin-precession in LIGO Hanford leads to a noticeable inconsistency between the inferred binary mass ratio and precessing spin in the two LIGO detectors, something not expected from solely different Gaussian noise realizations. We revisit the LIGO Livingston glitch mitigation and…
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