Prospects for multi-messenger discovery of the gravitational-wave background anisotropies via cross-correlation with galaxies
Raphael Bertrand-Delgado, Felipe Andrade-Oliveira, Michael Ebersold, Marcelle Soares-Santos

TL;DR
This study forecasts the potential to detect gravitational-wave background anisotropies through cross-correlation with galaxy surveys, emphasizing the importance of angular resolution, survey depth, and multi-messenger approaches.
Contribution
It provides empirically grounded forecasts for detecting gravitational-wave background anisotropies using galaxy cross-correlation, considering realistic observational constraints and survey parameters.
Findings
Detection feasible with 4.1° resolution within five years using galaxy cross-correlation.
Extending to ten years reduces resolution requirement to 6.5°.
Redshift binning enables reconstruction of the kernel evolution for better population constraints.
Abstract
We present new empirically grounded forecasts for the detectability of the stochastic gravitational-wave background anisotropies assuming a population of stellar-mass compact binary coalescences as its source. We quantified the discovery potential using simulations based on the Euclid Flagship Galaxy Catalogue and LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA observational constraints in combination with detailed theoretical modelling. We considered the multi-messenger cross-correlation with galaxies as well as the gravitational wave-only cross-correlation across observation-time bins. For compact binaries up to redshift , we found that an angular resolution of deg () is required for discovery within five years of observation via cross-correlation with a galaxy catalogue that is complete up to limiting magnitude and has redshift uncertainties .…
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