Exciting Modes due to the Aberration of Gravitational Waves: Measurability for Extreme-Mass-Ratio Inspirals

Gravitational waves from a source moving relative to us can suffer from special-relativistic effects such as aberration. The required velocities for these to be significant are on the order of 1000 km s(-1). This value corresponds to the velocity dispersion that one finds in clusters of galaxies. He...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review letters 2021-07, Vol.127 (4), p.1-041102, Article 041102
Hauptverfasser: Torres-Orjuela, Alejandro, Seoane, Pau Amaro, Xuan, Zeyuan, Chua, Alvin J. K., Rosell, Mara J. B., Chen, Xian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gravitational waves from a source moving relative to us can suffer from special-relativistic effects such as aberration. The required velocities for these to be significant are on the order of 1000 km s(-1). This value corresponds to the velocity dispersion that one finds in clusters of galaxies. Hence, we expect a large number of gravitational-wave sources to have such effects imprinted in their signals. In particular, the signal from a moving source will have its higher modes excited, i.e., (3,3) and beyond. We derive expressions describing this effect and study its measurability for the specific case of a circular, nonspinning extreme-mass-ratio inspiral. We find that the excitation of higher modes by a peculiar velocity of 1000 km s(-1) is detectable for such inspirals with signal-to-noise ratios of greater than or similar to 20. Using a Fisher matrix analysis, we show that the velocity of the source can be measured to a precision of just a few percent for a signal-to-noise ratio of 100. If the motion of the source is ignored, parameter estimates could be biased, e.g., the estimated masses of the components through a Doppler shift. Conversely, by including this effect in waveform models, we could measure the velocity dispersion of clusters of galaxies at distances inaccessible to light.
ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.041102