Measuring gravitational waves from binary black hole coalescences: II. the waves' information and its extraction, with and without templates
Eanna E. Flanagan, Scott A. Hughes

TL;DR
This paper explores methods for extracting information from binary black hole merger gravitational waves, including band-pass filtering, maximum likelihood waveform extraction, and the use of templates, to improve detection and parameter estimation.
Contribution
It introduces an optimized likelihood method for extracting merger waveforms and discusses the potential for template-based analysis to test general relativity and measure binary parameters.
Findings
Merger waves are barely visible in initial and advanced LIGO noise for certain black hole masses.
An optimized maximum likelihood method can extract waveforms from noisy detector data.
Estimations of information content and template accuracy requirements for gravitational wave analysis.
Abstract
We discuss the extraction of information from detected binary black hole (BBH) coalescence gravitational waves, focusing on the merger phase that occurs after the gradual inspiral and before the ringdown. Our results are: (1) If numerical relativity simulations have not produced template merger waveforms before BBH detections by LIGO/VIRGO, one can band-pass filter the merger waves. For BBHs smaller than about 40 solar masses detected via their inspiral waves, the band pass filtering signal to noise ratio indicates that the merger waves should typically be just barely visible in the noise for initial and advanced LIGO interferometers. (2) We derive an optimized (maximum likelihood) method for extracting a best-fit merger waveform from the noisy detector output; one "perpendicularly projects" this output onto a function space (specified using wavelets) that incorporates our prior…
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