Inferring Interference: Identifying a Perturbing Tertiary with Eccentric Gravitational Wave Burst Timing
Isobel M. Romero-Shaw, Nicholas Loutrel, Michael Zevin

TL;DR
This paper presents a Bayesian inference method to detect and characterize a tertiary perturber in eccentric binary black hole systems through gravitational wave burst timing, enhancing understanding of complex three-body interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a toy model linking tertiary properties to gravitational wave burst times and demonstrates how to infer these properties with next-generation detectors.
Findings
Bayesian inference can identify tertiary perturbers with high confidence.
Knowledge of binary parameters improves tertiary property estimation.
Next-generation detectors enable >90% confidence in detecting perturbations.
Abstract
[Abridged] Binary black holes may form and merge dynamically. These binaries are likely to become bound with high eccentricities, resulting in a burst of gravitational radiation at their point of closest approach. When such a binary is perturbed by a third body, the evolution of the orbit is affected, and gravitational-wave burst times are altered. The bursts times therefore encode information about the tertiary. In order to extract this information, we require a prescription for the relationship between the tertiary properties and the gravitational-wave burst times. In this paper, we demonstrate a toy model for the burst times of a secular three-body system. We show how Bayesian inference can be employed to deduce the tertiary properties when the bursts are detected by next-generation ground-based gravitational-wave detectors. We study the bursts from an eccentric binary with a total…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
