Abstract
Third-generation gravitational wave detectors, such as the Einstein Telescope and Cosmic Explorer, will detect a bunch of gravitational-wave (GW) signals originating from the coalescence of binary neutron star (BNS) and binary black hole (BBH) systems out to higher redshifts, $z\ensuremath{\sim}5--10$. There is a potential concern that some of the GW signals detected at a high statistical significance eventually overlap with each other, and the parameter estimation of such an overlapping system can differ from the one expected from a single event. Also, there are certainly overlapping systems in which one of the overlapping events has a low signal-to-noise ratio $\ensuremath{\lesssim}4$, and is thus unable to be clearly detected. Those systems will potentially be misidentified with a single GW event, and the estimated parameters of binary GWs can be biased. We estimate the occurrence rate of those overlapping events. We find that the numbers of overlapping events are $\ensuremath{\sim}200$ per day for BNSs and a few per hour for BBHs. Then we study the statistical impacts of these overlapping GWs on a parameter estimation based on the Fisher matrix analysis. Our finding is that the overlapping signals produce neither large statistical errors nor serious systematic biases on the parameters of binary systems, unless the coalescence time and the redshifted chirp masses of the two overlapping GWs are very close to each other, i.e., $|{\mathcal{M}}_{z1}\ensuremath{-}{\mathcal{M}}_{z2}|\ensuremath{\lesssim}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}4}({10}^{\ensuremath{-}1})\text{ }\text{ }{M}_{\ensuremath{\bigodot}}$ and $|{t}_{\mathrm{c}1}\ensuremath{-}{t}_{\mathrm{c}2}|\ensuremath{\lesssim}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}2}({10}^{\ensuremath{-}1})\text{ }\text{ }\mathrm{s}$ for BNSs (BBHs). The occurrence rate of such a closely overlapping event is shown to be much smaller than one per year with the third-generation detectors.
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