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arxiv: 1503.05953 · v2 · submitted 2015-03-19 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE · gr-qc

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Measuring intermediate mass black hole binaries with advanced gravitational wave detectors

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classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE gr-qc
keywords massmeasuredodottotalaccuratelybinariesmassesbinary
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We perform a systematic study to explore the accuracy with which the parameters of intermediate-mass black-hole binary systems can be measured from their gravitational wave (GW) signatures using second-generation GW detectors. We make use of the most recent reduced-order models containing inspiral, merger and ringdown signals of aligned-spin effective-one-body waveforms (SEOBNR) to significantly speed up the calculations. We explore the phenomenology of the measurement accuracies for binaries with total masses between 50 and 500 $M_\odot$ and mass ratios between 0.1 and 1. We find that (i) at total masses below ~200 $M_\odot$, where the signal-to-noise-ratio is dominated by the inspiral portion of the signal, the chirp mass parameter can be accurately measured; (ii) at higher masses, the information content is dominated by the ringdown, and total mass is measured more accurately; (iii) the mass of the lower-mass companion is poorly estimated, especially at high total mass and more extreme mass ratios; (iv) spin cannot be accurately measured for our injection set with non-spinning components. Most importantly, we find that for binaries with non-spinning components at all values of the mass ratio in the considered range and at network signal-to-noise ratio of 15, analyzed with spin-aligned templates, the presence of an intermediate-mass black hole with mass >100 $M_\odot$ can be confirmed with 95% confidence in any binary that includes a component with a mass of 130 $M_\odot$ or greater.

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Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Gravitational-wave parameter estimation to the Moon and back: massive binaries and the case of GW231123

    gr-qc 2025-12 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    LGWA could observe more than one third of known binary black hole events, detect ~90 mergers per year, and measure chirp mass better than third-generation detectors for massive systems.