How lonely are the Binary Compact Objects Detected by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration?
Devesh Giri, Suvodip Mukherjee

TL;DR
This paper models how three-body encounters can affect gravitational wave signals from binary mergers and uses LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA data to constrain the presence of intermediate-mass black holes near these binaries.
Contribution
It introduces a new model for GW dephasing due to three-body interactions and applies it to observational data to set bounds on nearby intermediate-mass black holes.
Findings
No significant deviations found in GW data.
Constraints placed on the presence of intermediate-mass black holes above 100 solar masses.
First upper bounds on intermediate-mass black holes near GW events.
Abstract
Gravitational-wave (GW) observations of compact binary coalescences (CBCs) are traditionally interpreted under the assumption that the binary evolves in isolation. However, in realistic astrophysical environments, brief three-body encounters may perturb the binary's orbital evolution and imprint deviations on the emitted GWs. We develop a physically motivated model for such interactions, retaining Newtonian three-body dynamics supplemented by leading-order (PN) radiation-reaction within the binary. We show that such encounters produce a distinctive morphology of dephasing and amplitude modulation in GWs. We search for this kind of distortion from the LIGO--Virgo--KAGRA (LVK) GW catalog GWTC-4 on three events: GW170817, GW190814, and GW230627\_015337, chosen based on high SNR and in-band duration . We find no statistically significant deviation in the data,…
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