4.7 Article

Gravitational waves from a compact star in a circular, inspiral orbit, in the equatorial plane of a massive, spinning black hole, as observed by LISA

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 62, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.62.124021

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Results are presented from high-precision computations of the orbital evolution and emitted gravitational waves for a stellar-mass object spiraling into a massive black hole in a slowly shrinking, circular, equatorial orbit. The focus of these computations is inspiral near the innermost stable circular orbit (isco)-more particularly, on orbits for which the angular velocity Omega is 0.03 less than or similar to Omega/Omega (isco)less than or equal to1.0. The computations are based on the Teuksolsky-Sasaki-Nakamura formalism, and the results are tabulated in a set of functions that are of order unity and represent relativistic corrections to low-orbital-velocity formulas. These tables can form a foundation for future design studies for the LISA space-based gravitational-wave mission. A first survey of applications to LISA is presented: Signal to noise ratios SIN are computed and graphed as functions of the time-evolving gravitational-wave frequency for the lowest three harmonics of the orbital period, and for various representative values of the hole's mass M and spin a and the inspiraling object's mass mu, with the distance to Earth chosen to be r(o) = 1 Gpc. These S/N's show a very strong dependence on the black-hole spin, as well as on M and mu. Graphs are presented showing the range of the {M,a, mu} parameter space, for which S/N>10 at r(o) = 1 Gpc during the last year of inspiral. The hole's spin a has a factor of similar to 10 influence on the range of M (at fixed mu) for which S/N>10, and the presence or absence of a white-dwarf-binary background has a factor of similar to3 influence. A comparison with predicted event rates shows strong promise for detecting these waves, but not beyond about 1 Gpc if the inspiraling object is a white dwarf or neutron star. This argues for a modest lowering of LISA's noise floor. A brief discussion is given of the prospects for extracting information from the observed waves.

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