Measuring gravitational waves from binary black hole coalescences: I. Signal to noise for inspiral, merger, and ringdown
Eanna E. Flanagan, Scott A. Hughes

TL;DR
This paper estimates the signal-to-noise ratios for different phases of binary black hole coalescences across various detectors, highlighting their detection prospects and the potential for discovering numerous black hole mergers.
Contribution
It provides detailed SNR estimates for inspiral, merger, and ringdown phases of binary black holes for ground and space-based detectors, and discusses detection strategies and template requirements.
Findings
LIGO/VIRGO can detect moderate SNR BBH signals up to 2000 solar masses.
LISA can achieve high SNR for supermassive black hole mergers.
Merger and ringdown searches could significantly increase detection rates.
Abstract
We estimate the expected signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) from the three phases (inspiral,merger,ringdown) of coalescing binary black holes (BBHs) for initial and advanced ground-based interferometers (LIGO/VIRGO) and for space-based interferometers (LISA). LIGO/VIRGO can do moderate SNR (a few tens), moderate accuracy studies of BBH coalescences in the mass range of a few to about 2000 solar masses; LISA can do high SNR (of order 10^4) high accuracy studies in the mass range of about 10^5 to 10^8 solar masses. BBHs might well be the first sources detected by LIGO/VIRGO: they are visible to much larger distances (up to 500 Mpc by initial interferometers) than coalescing neutron star binaries (heretofore regarded as the "bread and butter" workhorse source for LIGO/VIRGO, visible to about 30 Mpc by initial interferometers). Low-mass BBHs (up to 50 solar masses for initial LIGO…
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