Litcius/Paper detail

Binary white dwarfs and decihertz gravitational wave observations: From the Hubble constant to supernova astrophysics

A. Maselli, S. Marassi, M. Branchesi

2020Astronomy and Astrophysics19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Context. Coalescences of binary white dwarfs represent a copious source of information for gravitational wave interferometers operating in the decihertz band. Moreover, according to the double degenerate scenario, they have been suggested to be possible progenitors of supernovae (SNe) Type Ia events. Aims. In this paper we discuss the detectability of gravitational waves emitted by the inspiral of double white dwarfs. We focus on the constraints that can be derived on the source’s luminosity distance, and on other binary’s parameters, such as the angular momentum orientation. Methods. We explore the possibility of coincident detections of gravitational and electromagnetic signals; the latter comes from the observation of the supernova counterpart. Confirmation of the double degenerate scenario would allow one to use distances inferred in the gravitational wave channel to consistently calibrate SNe as standard candles. Results. We find that decihertz gravitational wave interferometers can measure the luminosity distance with relative accuracy better than 1% for binaries at 100 Mpc. We show how multimessenger observations can put strong constraints on the Hubble constant, which are tighter than current bounds at low redshift, and how they can potentially shed new light on the differences with early-universe measurements.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsWhite dwarfGravitational waveSupernovaLuminosityAstronomyBinary numberEinstein TelescopeGravitational lensGravitational-wave astronomyGravitational energyHubble's lawLIGOBinary starAstronomical interferometerGravitational redshiftLuminosity distanceAngular momentumGravitational-wave observatoryLight curveGravitationNeutron starMassive compact halo objectHubble Deep FieldBinary black holeBlack hole (networking)Stellar evolutionGravitational microlensingDegenerate energy levelsPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeStellar, planetary, and galactic studies