Binary inspiral, gravitational radiation, and cosmology
Lee Samuel Finn (Northwestern University)

TL;DR
This paper derives general formulas for the distribution of gravitational wave binary inspiral events in catalogs, considering cosmological parameters, and evaluates their implications for observations with advanced LIGO.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive expressions for event distributions in gravitational wave catalogs across any homogeneous and isotropic cosmological model, including explicit calculations for relevant cosmologies.
Findings
Advanced LIGO can detect neutron star inspirals up to ~2 Gpc at a rate of 1 per week.
Binary black holes of 10 solar masses can be observed up to redshift ~2.7 in certain cosmological models.
Event distributions depend on cosmology, aiding in testing models and constructing detection templates.
Abstract
Observations of binary inspiral in a single interferometric gravitational wave detector can be cataloged according to signal-to-noise ratio and chirp mass . The distribution of events in a catalog composed of observations with greater than a threshold depends on the Hubble expansion, deceleration parameter, and cosmological constant, as well as the distribution of component masses in binary systems and evolutionary effects. In this paper I find general expressions, valid in any homogeneous and isotropic cosmological model, for the distribution with and of cataloged events; I also evaluate these distributions explicitly for relevant matter-dominated Friedmann-Robertson-Walker models and simple models of the neutron star mass distribution. In matter dominated Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmological models advanced LIGO detectors will observe…
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