Intermediate-mass black hole binary parameter estimation with next-generation ground-based detector networks
Luca Reali, Roberto Cotesta, Andrea Antonelli, Konstantinos Kritos,, Vladimir Strokov, Emanuele Berti

TL;DR
Next-generation ground-based gravitational-wave detectors will significantly improve the detection and parameter estimation of intermediate-mass black hole binaries, enabling precise mass, redshift, and localization measurements across a wide range of distances.
Contribution
This study evaluates the capabilities of future detector networks like Cosmic Explorer and Einstein Telescope for detecting and characterizing IMBH binary mergers, highlighting their potential for astrophysical insights.
Findings
Masses can be constrained with errors less than 0.1% at z=0.5.
Source redshift can be measured with percent-level accuracy at z≤2.
Binaries at z≤0.5 can be localized within 1 deg².
Abstract
Astrophysical scenarios for the formation and evolution of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) in the mass range remain uncertain, but future ground-based gravitational-wave (GW) interferometers will probe the lower end of the IMBH mass range. We study the detectability of IMBH binary mergers and the measurability of their parameters with next-generation ground-based detector networks consisting of various combinations of Cosmic Explorer (CE) and Einstein Telescope (ET) interferometers. We find that, for binaries with component masses , an optimal 3-detector network can constrain the masses with errors () at (), and the source redshift can be measured with percent-level accuracy or better at . The redshift of lighter binaries ($m_{1,2}\lesssim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
