Measuring source properties and quasi-normal-mode frequencies of heavy massive black-hole binaries with LISA
Alexandre Toubiana, Lorenzo Pompili, Alessandra Buonanno, Jonathan R., Gair, Michael L. Katz

TL;DR
This paper evaluates LISA's potential to measure properties and test deviations from General Relativity in massive black-hole binary signals, emphasizing the importance of accurate waveform models for high SNR observations.
Contribution
It introduces a Bayesian analysis framework using the exttt{pSEOBNRv5HM} model to assess LISA's ability to constrain GR deviations and measure binary parameters with high precision.
Findings
Deviations from GR can be constrained to within 10%, sometimes 1%.
Binary masses and spins can be measured accurately even at low SNR.
Waveform model inaccuracies can lead to erroneous GR deviations at SNR ~100.
Abstract
The laser-interferometer space antenna (LISA) will be launched in the mid 2030s. It promises to observe the coalescence of massive black-hole (BH) binaries with signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) reaching thousands. Crucially, it will detect some of these binaries with high SNR both in the inspiral and the merger-ringdown stages. Such signals are ideal for tests of General Relativity (GR) using information from the whole waveform. Here, we consider astrophysically motivated binary systems at the high-mass end of the population observable by LISA, and simulate their signals using the newly developed multipolar effective-one-body model: \texttt{pSEOBNRv5HM}. The merger-ringdown signal in this model depends on the binary properties, and also on parameters that describe fractional deviations from the GR quasi-normal-mode (complex) frequencies of the remnant BH. Performing full Bayesian analyses,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
