Abstract

Gravitational-wave (GW) signals from coalescing compact binaries carry enormous 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 GW inference library parallel Bilby to compare the performance of two waveform models for measuring spin-induced orbital precession. One of the waveform models incorporates both spin-precession effects and sub-dominant harmonics. The other model accounts for precession but only includes the leading harmonic. By simulating signals with varying mass ratios and spins, we find that the waveform model with sub-dominant harmonics enables us to infer the presence of precession in most cases accurately. In contrast, the dominant 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 measuring 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. However, the precession measurements are prior dominated for equal-mass binaries with face-on orientation, even if we employ 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 GW parameter inferences.

Highlights

  • The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Scientific Collaboration have released an updated catalog of gravitational-wave (GW) detections, GWTC-3, containing about ninety GW events [1–17]

  • We mainly focus on IMRPhenomPv3HM waveform model [178] and use IMRPhenomPv3 waveform model to separate the effect of subdominant harmonics in measuring spin-induced orbital precession parameter

  • We find the same trend in the posteriors of the dominant harmonic model and face-on orientations: As the mass ratio is constrained towards small values, the χp probability shifts towards small values following the prior

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Scientific Collaboration have released an updated catalog of gravitational-wave (GW) detections, GWTC-3, containing about ninety GW events [1–17]. Focusing on precessing binary BH systems with and without mass asymmetries, we explore the possibility of characterizing spin-induced orbital precession effects varying the source inclination angle to the detector. We focus on the spin-induced orbital precession parameter measurements for generic binary systems using waveform models that account for both spin-induced orbital precession effects as well as higher harmonics using a complete Bayesian analysis. While it is possible to complement our study with the appropriate nonprecessing analyses for comparison, deriving robust Bayes factors has, in our experience, proved sensitive to analysis choices that have nothing to do with the effect we want to quantify This is mainly due to the significant increase in the parameter-space dimensions when including precession.

WAVEFORM DECOMPOSITIONS
Waveform model
Parameter estimation
The importance of including higher harmonics on χ p measurements
Precession measurements with the dominant harmonic model and the role of prior distribution
The effect of signal-to-noise ratio on χ p measurements
Measurement accuracies for highly-asymmetric edge-on binaries with varying spin-precession effects
SUMMARY
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