Abstract

In the observation of gravitational waves (GWs) from a compact binary coalescence system where the mass of one of the companions is $\leq 5~M_{\odot}$ the nature of the object is ambiguous until the measurements of tidal effects give evidence for the presence of a neutron star (NS) or a low mass black hole (BH). The relevance of tidal effects in a neutron star--black hole (NSBH) binary system depends crucially upon the mass and the spin of the companion BH. These effects become important predominantly when the binary system is of comparable mass and/or has large aligned spins. Depending upon the masses and spins the NS can even get tidally disrupted before the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) is reached. The gravitational-wave signatures of various tidal effects are encoded in the phasing of the signal and in the case of tidal disruption an abrupt cutoff of the signal amplitude occurs. In this work we show that tidal effects can also be captured by the nonlinear memory of the GW signal. Although small in amplitude, nonlinear memory is present at low frequency in contrast to the oscillatory GW signal. We introduce nonlinear memory in the NSBH and binary black hole (BBH) waveform models and show how the addition of memory aids in distinguishing NSBH systems from BBH systems for a larger part of the parameter space. We discuss the recently detected events of interest by LIGO-Virgo and provide the future prospects for the third generation detectors where nonlinear memory can play a crucial role in inferring the nature of the coalescence as BBH or NSBH from its GW signal alone.

Highlights

  • Neutron star-black hole binary systems are an extremely rich and versatile resource for gravitational wave (GW) astronomy

  • In this work we have provided yet another nonfungible property of memory; to distinguish tidally disrupted events of neutron star-black hole (NSBH) systems from the binary black hole (BBH) systems

  • Even though the memory signal is much weaker compared to the oscillatory signal it contributes in the part of the parameter space where, for the oscillatory signal, distinguishing tidally disrupted NSBH events from BBH systems is most difficult

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Neutron star-black hole binary systems are an extremely rich and versatile resource for gravitational wave (GW) astronomy. The memory component of GWs from compact binary coalescences (CBCs) slowly accumulates during the inspiral and significantly jumps during the merger phase of the evolution when spacetime curvature is highest This adds a late-time low frequency component to the waveforms of CBC systems. This occurs at the point in the signal where the frequencies go beyond the sensitive range of current generation ground-based detectors This low frequency component has been used to look for sources that emit GWs at very high frequencies [52], for example very light BBH mergers [53], providing a creative way to widen the parameter space of GW searches.

MEMORY OF NEUTRON STAR-BLACK HOLE SYSTEMS
NONLINEAR MEMORY AS AN IDENTIFIER OF TIDAL DISRUPTION EVENT
Memory signal for various cases of tidal disruptions
Complementing the oscillatory signal with memory
PROSPECTS FOR IDENTIFYING TIDAL DISRUPTION EVENTS USING
INTERPRETATION OF THE DETECTED EVENTS
Findings
CONCLUSION
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