Gravitational-wave parameter estimation to the Moon and back: massive binaries and the case of GW231123
Francesco Iacovelli, Jacopo Tissino, Jan Harms, Emanuele Berti

TL;DR
The paper evaluates the potential of the proposed Lunar Gravitational-Wave Antenna (LGWA) to detect binary black holes, enabling multiband gravitational-wave astronomy and early warning capabilities, with significant improvements over current detectors.
Contribution
It demonstrates that LGWA could observe a substantial fraction of known and simulated binary black hole events, enhancing multiband detection and early warning for gravitational-wave astronomy.
Findings
LGWA could detect over one third of current BBH events.
It can observe approximately 90 events per year merging in the ground-based band at high redshifts.
Multiband observations enable early warning and improved parameter estimation, especially for intermediate-mass BBHs.
Abstract
We study the prospects of the Lunar Gravitational-Wave Antenna (LGWA), a proposed deci-Hz GW detector, to observe binary black holes (BBHs) and enable multiband science with ground-based detectors. We assess the detectability of the events observed by current instruments up to the GWTC-4.0 data release, and of simulated populations consistent with the latest reconstruction by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration. We find that LGWA alone would have been able to observe more than one third of the events detected so far, and that it could detect events merging in the ground-based band per year out to redshifts . Current detectors at design sensitivity and 100% duty cycle could detect thousands of BBHs per year, with one to a few hundred multiband counterparts in LGWA. Third-generation (3G) detectors can observe most of the BBHs detected by LGWA merging in their frequency…
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