ESIGMAHM: An Eccentric, Spinning inspiral-merger-ringdown waveform model with Higher Modes for the detection and characterization of binary black holes
Kaushik Paul, Akash Maurya, Quentin Henry, Kartikey Sharma, Pranav, Satheesh, Divyajyoti, Prayush Kumar, Chandra Kant Mishra

TL;DR
This paper introduces ESIGMAHM, a new waveform model for eccentric, spinning black hole binaries that improves detection and characterization by including higher modes and validated against numerical relativity simulations.
Contribution
The paper presents ESIGMAHM, a comprehensive eccentric inspiral-merger-ringdown waveform model incorporating spins and higher modes, validated against numerical relativity and effective-one-body models.
Findings
Achieves >99% match for quasi-circular spin-aligned binaries
Detects eccentric sources up to 10% louder with next-gen detectors
Current searches may lose over 10% SNR for 20% of eccentric sources
Abstract
We present a time-domain inspiral-merger-ringdowm (IMR) waveform model ESIGMAHM constructed within a framework we named ESIGMA for coalescing binaries of spinning black holes on moderately eccentric orbits (Huerta et al. (2018) [Phys. Rev. D 97, 024031]). We now include the effect of black hole spins on the dynamics of eccentric binaries, as well as model sub-dominant waveform harmonics emitted by them. The inspiral evolution is described by a consistent combination of latest results from post-Newtonian theory, self-force, and black hole perturbation theory. We assume that these moderately eccentric binaries radiate away most of their orbital eccentricity before merger, and seamlessly connect the eccentric inspiral with a numerical relativity based surrogate waveform model for mergers of spinning binaries on quasi-circular orbits. We validate ESIGMAHM against eccentric Numerical…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Geophysics and Sensor Technology
