The information content of gravitational wave harmonics in compact binary inspiral
Ronald W. Hellings (Montana State University), Thomas A. Moore, (Pomona College)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how higher harmonics in gravitational wave signals from binary inspirals provide crucial information for accurately determining source parameters, especially in cases with limited signal modulation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that higher harmonics significantly improve parameter estimation accuracy for binary systems in space-based gravitational wave detection.
Findings
Higher harmonics help localize black hole binaries in the sky.
Masses of neutron star binary components can be distinguished.
Higher harmonics enable parameter estimation even with short signal durations.
Abstract
The nonlinear aspect of gravitational wave generation that produces power at harmonics of the orbital frequency, above the fundamental quadrupole frequency, is examined to see what information about the source is contained in these higher harmonics. We use an order (4/2) post-Newtonian expansion of the gravitational wave waveform of a binary system to model the signal seen in a spaceborne gravitational wave detector such as the proposed LISA detector. Covariance studies are then performed to determine the ultimate accuracy to be expected when the parameters of the source are fit to the received signal. We find three areas where the higher harmonics contribute crucial information that breaks degeneracies in the model and allows otherwise badly-correlated parameters to be separated and determined. First, we find that the position of a coalescing massive black hole binary in an ecliptic…
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