Deep Neural Emulation of the Supermassive Black-hole Binary Population
Nima Laal, Stephen R. Taylor, Luke Zoltan Kelley, Joseph Simon, Kayhan, Gultekin, David Wright, Bence Becsy, J. Andrew Casey-Clyde, Siyuan Chen,, Alexander Cingoranelli, Daniel J. D'Orazio, Emiko C. Gardiner, William G., Lamb, Cayenne Matt, Magdalena S. Siwek

TL;DR
This paper introduces a normalizing flow emulator for supermassive black-hole binary gravitational wave backgrounds, offering more accurate and computationally efficient predictions than previous Gaussian process models.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel normalizing flow emulator trained on full GWB strain distributions, capturing complex statistical features beyond mean and variance.
Findings
NF emulator closely matches simulation distributions
Outperforms Gaussian processes in fidelity and efficiency
Captures non-Gaussianities and multimodalities in strain data
Abstract
While supermassive black-hole (SMBH)-binaries are not the only viable source for the low-frequency gravitational wave background (GWB) signal evidenced by the most recent pulsar timing array (PTA) data sets, they are expected to be the most likely. Thus, connecting the measured PTA GWB spectrum and the underlying physics governing the demographics and dynamics of SMBH-binaries is extremely important. Previously, Gaussian processes (GPs) and dense neural networks have been used to make such a connection by being built as conditional emulators; their input is some selected evolution or environmental SMBH-binary parameters and their output is the emulated mean and standard deviation of the GWB strain ensemble distribution over many Universes. In this paper, we use a normalizing flow (NF) emulator that is trained on the entirety of the GWB strain ensemble distribution, rather than only mean…
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 · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
