Fake Massive Black Holes in the Milli-Hertz Gravitational-wave Band

In gravitational-wave (GW) astronomy accurate measurement of the source parameters, such as mass, relies on accurate waveform templates. Currently, templates are developed assuming that a source, such as a stellar-mass binary black hole (BBH), is residing in a vacuum. However, astrophysical models p...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2020-06, Vol.896 (2), p.171
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Xian, Xuan, Ze-Yuan, Peng, Peng
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Xuan, Ze-Yuan
Peng, Peng
description In gravitational-wave (GW) astronomy accurate measurement of the source parameters, such as mass, relies on accurate waveform templates. Currently, templates are developed assuming that a source, such as a stellar-mass binary black hole (BBH), is residing in a vacuum. However, astrophysical models predict that BBHs could form in gaseous environments, such as common envelopes, stellar cores, and accretion disks of active galactic nuclei. Here we revisit the impact of gas on the GW waveforms of BBHs with a focus on the early inspiral phase when the GW frequency is around milli-Hertz. We show that for these BBHs, gas friction could dominate the dynamical evolution and hence duplicate chirp signals. The relevant hydrodynamical timescale, τgas, could be much shorter than the GW radiation timescale, τgw, in the above astrophysical scenarios. As a result, the observed chirp mass is higher than the real one by a factor of if the gas effect is ignored in the data analysis. This kind of error also results in an overestimation of the source distance by a factor of . By performing matched-filtering analysis in the milli-Hertz band, we prove that the gas-dominated signals are practically indistinguishable from the chirp signals of those more massive BBHs residing in a vacuum environment. Such fake massive objects in the milli-Hertz band, if not appropriately accounted for in the future, may alter our understanding of the formation, evolution, and detection of BBHs.
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By performing matched-filtering analysis in the milli-Hertz band, we prove that the gas-dominated signals are practically indistinguishable from the chirp signals of those more massive BBHs residing in a vacuum environment. 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subjects Accretion
Accretion disks
Active galactic nuclei
Astronomical models
Astronomy
Astrophysical models
Astrophysics
Binary stars
Black holes
Chirp signals
Data analysis
Error analysis
Evolution
Gravitation
Gravitational wave sources
Gravitational waves
Hydrodynamics
Radiation
Stellar cores
Stellar evolution
Time
Waveforms
title Fake Massive Black Holes in the Milli-Hertz Gravitational-wave Band
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