Litcius/Paper detail

Interplay of spin-precession and higher harmonics in the parameter estimation of binary black holes

N. V. Krishnendu, F. Ohme

2022Physical review. D/Physical review. D.27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gravitational-wave signals from coalescing compact binaries carry an enormous amount of information about the source dynamics and are an excellent tool to probe unknown astrophysics and fundamental physics. Though the updated catalog of compact binary signals reports evidence for slowly-spinning systems and unequal mass binaries, the data so far cannot provide convincing proof of strongly precessing binaries. Here, we use the gravitational-wave inference library parallel Bilby to compare the performance of two waveform models for understanding the spin-induced orbital precession effects in simulated binary black hole signals. One of the waveform models incorporates both spin-precession effects and subdominant harmonics. The other model accounts for precession but only includes the leading harmonic at quadrupolar order. By simulating signals with varying mass ratios and spins, we find that the waveform model with subdominant harmonics enables us to infer the presence of precession in most cases accurately. On the other hand, the dominant harmonic model often fails to extract enough information to measure precession. In particular, it cannot distinguish a face-on highly-precessing binary from a slowly-precessing binary system irrespective of the binary's mass ratio. As expected, we see a significant improvement in characterizing precession for edge-on binaries. Other intrinsic parameters also become better constrained, indicating that precession effects help break the correlations between mass and spin parameters. In contrast, spin-precession measurements are prior dominated for equal-mass binaries with face-on orientation, even if we employ a waveform model including subdominant harmonics. In this case, doubling the signal-to-noise ratio does not help to reduce these prior induced biases. As we expect detections of highly-spinning binary signals with misaligned spin orientations in the future, simulation studies like ours are crucial for understanding the prospects and limitations of gravitational-wave parameter inferences.

Topics & Concepts

PrecessionPhysicsBinary numberHarmonicsBinary black holeSpin (aerodynamics)HarmonicMass ratioBlack hole (networking)Gravitational waveWaveformAstrophysicsComputational physicsQuantum mechanicsComputer scienceMathematicsComputer networkVoltageThermodynamicsRouting (electronic design automation)Routing protocolLink-state routing protocolArithmeticPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena