Rethinking Resonance Detectability during Binary Neutron Star Inspiral: Accurate Mismatch Computations for Low-lying Dynamical Tides
Alberto Revilla-Pe\~na, Ruxandra Bondarescu, Andrew P. Lundgren, and Jordi Miralda-Escud\'e

TL;DR
This paper investigates how low-lying dynamical tides in binary neutron star mergers affect gravitational wave signals, showing that resonance causes a time advance rather than a phase shift, impacting detectability assessments.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed mismatch computation method revealing that tidal resonances primarily cause a time advance, challenging previous phase-based models.
Findings
Resonance causes a time advance of about 1 ms detectable by advanced LVK detectors.
Single-frequency approximation overestimates the resonance detectability.
Tidal resonance effects are primarily time shifts, not phase shifts.
Abstract
We compute deviations from observed gravitational wave signals, where the amplitude of the signal is unchanged. As an example, we consider the detectability of low lying dynamical tides in binary neutron star or neutron star black hole mergers. Tidal forces can excite oscillatory modes of one or both of the stars in the binary when the orbital frequency of the binary system sweeps through the resonant mode frequency dissipating energy into the vibrational mode. The orbital energy loss to the vibrational mode extracts energy from the orbital motion, advancing the time to merger. The inspiral then continues with an excess phase and a time advance. Both will cause a mismatch when fitting to a system that has not gone through the resonance. To resolve this effect, we compute the mismatch for current and planned detectors using both a quasi-analytical approach that relies on the computation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
