Impact of ringdown higher-order modes on black-hole mergers in dense environments: the scalar field case, detectability and parameter biases
Samson H. W. Leong, Juan Calder\'on Bustillo, Miguel Gracia-Linares,, Pablo Laguna

TL;DR
This study investigates how higher-order gravitational wave modes and environmental effects, modeled as scalar-field bubbles, influence black-hole merger signals and their detectability, revealing key conditions for identifying environmental imprints.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates the importance of sub-dominant modes in detecting environmental effects on black-hole mergers using Bayesian inference and numerical relativity waveforms.
Findings
Sub-dominant modes are crucial for environmental detection.
Face-on signals require both ringdown and inspiral in band for detection.
Edge-on mergers can reveal environment through ringdown alone.
Abstract
Dense environments hosting compact binary mergers can leave an imprint on the gravitational-wave emission which, in turn, can be used to identify the characteristics of the environment. To demonstrate such scenario, we consider a simple setup of binary black holes with an environment consisting of a scalar-field bubble. We use this as a proxy for more realistic environments and as an example of the simplest physics beyond the standard model. We perform Bayesian inference on the numerical relativity waveforms using state-of-the-art waveform templates for black-hole mergers. In particular, we perform parameter estimation and model selection on signals from black-hole mergers with different mass ratios, total mass and loudness, and hosted by scalar-field bubbles of varying field amplitude. We find that sub-dominant gravitational wave modes emitted during the coalescence and ringdown are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Model Reduction and Neural Networks
