Probing wave-optics effects and low-mass dark matter halos with lensing of gravitational waves from massive black holes
Mesut \c{C}al{\i}\c{s}kan, Neha Anil Kumar, Lingyuan Ji, Jose M., Ezquiaga, Roberto Cotesta, Emanuele Berti, Marc Kamionkowski

TL;DR
This paper investigates how LISA can detect wave-optics effects in gravitational waves from massive black hole binaries to probe low-mass dark matter halos, providing a new method to study dark matter distribution.
Contribution
It introduces a model-agnostic framework for estimating the probability of observing wave-optics effects in LISA data and analyzes detection rates across different MBHB and lens population models.
Findings
Detection probability of wave-optics effects can reach up to 3% at 1σ confidence.
LISA can probe lens masses between 10^3 and 10^8 solar masses.
Expected detection rates vary from near zero to several events depending on models.
Abstract
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) will detect gravitational waves (GWs) emitted by massive black hole binaries (MBHBs) in the low-frequency (mHz) band. Low-mass lenses, such as low-mass dark matter halos or subhalos, have sizes comparable to the wavelength of these GWs. Encounters with these lenses produce wave-optics (WO) effects that alter waveform phase and amplitude. Thus, a single event with observable WO effects can be used to probe the lens properties. In this paper, we first compute the probability of observing WO effects in a model-agnostic way. We perform information-matrix analyses over approximately 1000 MBHBs with total mass, mass ratio, and redshift spanning the ranges relevant to LISA. We then calculate lensing rates using three semi-analytical models of MBHB populations. In both cases, we use a waveform model that includes merger, ringdown, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
