Adding eccentricity to quasicircular binary-black-hole waveform models

Publication date

2021-06-15

Authors

Setyawati, Yoshinta EkaORCID 0000-0003-3718-4491ISNI 0000000506359935
Ohme, Frank

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

The detection of gravitational-wave signals from coalescing eccentric binary black holes would yield unprecedented information about the formation and evolution of compact binaries in specific scenarios, such as dynamical formation in dense stellar clusters and three-body interactions. The gravitational-wave searches by the ground-based interferometers, LIGO and Virgo, rely on analytical waveform models for binaries on quasi-circular orbits. Eccentric merger waveform models are less developed, and only a few numerical simulations of eccentric mergers are publicly available, but several eccentric inspiral models have been developed from the post-Newtonian expansion. Here we present a novel method to convert the dominant quadrupolar mode of any circular analytical binary-black-hole model into an eccentric model. First, using numerical simulations, we examine the additional amplitude and frequency modulations of eccentric signals that are not present in their circular counterparts. Subsequently, we identify suitable analytical descriptions of those modulations and inter-polate key parameters from twelve numerical simulations designated as our training dataset. This allows us to reconstruct the modulated amplitude and phase of any waveform up to mass ratio 3 and eccentricity 0.2. We find that the minimum overlap of the new model with numerical simulations is around 0.98 over all of our test dataset that are scaled to a 50 M⊙ black-hole binary starting at 35 Hz with aLIGO A+ design sensitivity. A python package pyrex easily carries out the computation of this method.

Keywords

Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)

Citation

Setyawati, Y E & Ohme, F 2021, 'Adding eccentricity to quasicircular binary-black-hole waveform models', Physical Review D, vol. 103, no. 12, 124011, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.103.124011