论文标题
预测使用高级Ligo和处女座检测重力波记忆效应
Forecasts for detecting the gravitational-wave memory effect with Advanced LIGO and Virgo
论文作者
论文摘要
从二进制黑洞(BBH)中检测引力波(GWS)允许在先前未研究的方向上测试一般相对论的理论:强曲率和高GW亮度。与该理论的这一方面相关的一种独特而可测量的效果是非线性GW记忆效应。 GW记忆效应的特征是它对自由下落的观察者的影响:其位置之间的适当距离在一系列GWS通过其位置经过之前和之后的距离有所不同。引力波干涉仪,例如Ligo和处女座探测器,可以通过单个BBH合并来测量此效果的特征,但以前的工作表明,它将需要比任何先前检测到的GW事件都更大和更接近的事件。在Ligo和处女座检测到的整个BBH合并群体中,找到GW记忆效应的证据更有可能很快发生。一项先前的研究表明,在大约一百次事件之后,由诸如第一个GW150914事件之类的二进制文件组成的BBH人群中可以检测到GW记忆效应。在本文中,我们计算了将需要先进的Ligo和处女座检测器(当探测器以设计敏感性运行时)的预测,以找到与Ligo侦探前两个观察结果中测得的事件人群一致的BBH群体中GW记忆效应的证据。我们发现,经过高级LIGO和处女座检测到的五年数据后,人口非线性GW记忆效应的信噪比大约为三个(接近先前使用的检测阈值)。我们指出,用于计算GW记忆效应的不同近似方法可能会导致明显不同的信噪比。
The detection of gravitational waves (GWs) from binary black holes (BBHs) has allowed the theory of general relativity to be tested in a previously unstudied regime: that of strong curvature and high GW luminosities. One distinctive and measurable effect associated with this aspect of the theory is the nonlinear GW memory effect. The GW memory effect is characterized by its effect on freely falling observers: the proper distance between their locations differs before and after a burst of GWs passes by their locations. Gravitational-wave interferometers, like the LIGO and Virgo detectors, can measure features of this effect from a single BBH merger, but previous work has shown that it will require an event that is significantly more massive and closer than any previously detected GW event. Finding evidence for the GW memory effect within the entire population of BBH mergers detected by LIGO and Virgo is more likely to occur sooner. A prior study has shown that the GW memory effect could be detected in a population of BBHs consisting of binaries like the first GW150914 event after roughly one-hundred events. In this paper, we compute forecasts of the time it will take the advanced LIGO and Virgo detectors (when the detectors are operating at their design sensitivities) to find evidence for the GW memory effect in a population of BBHs that is consistent with the measured population of events in the first two observing runs of the LIGO detectors. We find that after five years of data collected by the advanced LIGO and Virgo detectors the signal-to-noise ratio for the nonlinear GW memory effect in the population will be about three (near a previously used threshold for detection). We point out that the different approximation methods used to compute the GW memory effect can lead to notably different signal-to-noise ratios.