LISA capture sources: Approximate waveforms, signal-to-noise ratios, and parameter estimation accuracy

Oct, 2003
34 pages
Published in:
  • Phys.Rev.D 69 (2004) 082005
e-Print:

Citations per year

200320092015202120250102030405060
Abstract: (arXiv)
Captures of stellar-mass compact objects (COs) by massive (106M\sim 10^6 M_\odot) black holes (MBHs) are potentially an important source for LISA, the proposed space-based gravitational-wave (GW) detector. The orbits of the inspiraling COs are highly complicated: they can remain rather eccentric up until the final plunge, and display extreme versions of relativistic perihelion precession and Lense-Thirring precession of the orbital plane. The strongest capture signals will be ~10 times weaker than LISA's instrumental noise, but in principle (with sufficient computing power) they can be disentangled from the noise by matched filtering. The associated template waveforms are not yet in hand, but theorists will very likely be able to provide them before LISA launches. Here we introduce a family of approximate (post-Newtonian) capture waveforms, given in (nearly) analytic form, for use in advancing LISA studies until more accurate versions are available. Our model waveforms include most of the key qualitative features of true waveforms, and cover the full space of capture-event parameters (including orbital eccentricity and the MBH's spin). Here we use our approximate waveforms to (i) estimate the relative contributions of different harmonics (of the orbital frequency) to the total signal-to-noise ratio, and (ii) estimate the accuracy with which LISA will be able to extract the physical parameters of the capture event from the measured waveform. For a typical source (a 10M10 M_\odot CO captured by a 106M10^6 M_\odot MBH at a signal-to-noise ratio of 30), we find that LISA can determine the MBH and CO masses to within a fractional error of 104\sim 10^{-4}, measure S/M2S/M^2 (where SS and MM are the MBH's mass and spin) to within 104\sim 10^{-4}, and determine the sky location of the source to within 103\sim 10^{-3} stradians.
  • 04.25.Nx
  • 04.80.Cc
  • 04.30.Db
  • 04.80.Nn
  • black hole: capture
  • gravitational radiation detector
  • laser: interferometer
  • background
  • data analysis method
  • numerical calculations