Measuring gravitational waves from binary black hole coalescences. I. Signal to noise for inspiral, merger, and ringdown
Abstract
We estimate the expected signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) from the three phases (inspiral, merger, and ringdown) of coalescing binary black holes (BBHs) for initial and advanced ground-based interferometers (LIGO-VIRGO) and for the space-based interferometer LISA. Ground-based interferometers 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 104), high accuracy studies in the mass range of about 105-108 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 50Msolar for initial LIGO interferometers, 100Msolar for advanced, 106Msolar for LISA) are best searched for via their well-understood inspiral waves; higher mass BBHs must be searched for via their poorly understood merger waves and/or their well-understood ringdown waves. A matched filtering search for massive BBHs based on ringdown waves should be capable of finding BBHs in the mass range of about 100Msolar-700Msolar out to ~200 Mpc for initial LIGO interferometers, and in the mass range of ~200Msolar to ~3000Msolar out to about z=1 for advanced interferometers. The required number of templates is of the order of 6000 or less. Searches based on merger waves could increase the number of detected massive BBHs by a factor of the order of 10 over those found from inspiral and ringdown waves, without detailed knowledge of the waveform shapes, using a noise monitoring search algorithm which we describe. A full set of merger templates from numerical relativity simulations could further increase the number of detected BBHs by an additional factor of up to ~4.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review D
- Pub Date:
- April 1998
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevD.57.4535
- arXiv:
- arXiv:gr-qc/9701039
- Bibcode:
- 1998PhRvD..57.4535F
- Keywords:
-
- 04.80.Nn;
- 04.25.Dm;
- 04.30.Db;
- 95.55.Ym;
- Gravitational wave detectors and experiments;
- Numerical relativity;
- Wave generation and sources;
- Gravitational radiation detectors;
- mass spectrometers;
- and other instrumentation and techniques;
- General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology;
- Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 40 pages, Revtex, psfig.tex, seven figures, submitted to Phys Rev D