4.7 Article

Addressing the spin question in gravitational-wave searches: Waveform templates for inspiralling compact binaries with nonprecessing spins

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 84, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.84.084037

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LIGO Laboratory
  2. National Science Foundation [PHY-0653653, PHY-0601459, PHY-0956189, PHY-0757058]
  3. Caltech
  4. Division Of Physics
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0757058] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This paper presents a post-Newtonian (PN) template family of gravitational waveforms from inspiralling compact binaries with nonprecessing spins, where the spin effects are described by a single reduced-spin parameter. This template family, which reparametrizes all the spin-dependent PN terms in terms of the leading-order (1.5PN) spin-orbit coupling term in an approximate way, has very high overlaps (fitting factor >0.99) with nonprecessing binaries with arbitrary mass ratios and spins. We also show that this template family is effectual for the detection of a significant fraction of generic spinning binaries in the comparable-mass regime (m(2)/m(1) less than or similar to 10), providing an attractive and feasible way of searching for gravitational waves from spinning low-mass binaries. We also show that the secular (nonoscillatory) spin-dependent effects in the phase evolution (which are taken into account by the nonprecessing templates) are more important than the oscillatory effects of precession in the comparable-mass (m(1) similar or equal to m(2)) regime. Hence the effectualness of nonspinning templates is particularly poor in this case, as compared to non-precessing-spin templates. For the case of binary neutron stars observable by Advanced LIGO, even moderate spins ((L) over cap (N) . S/m(2) similar or equal to 0.015-0.1) will cause considerable mismatches (similar to 3%-25%) with nonspinning templates. This is contrary to the expectation that neutron-star spins may not be relevant for gravitational wave detection.

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