The observation of massive black hole binary systems is one of the main science objectives of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). The instrument's design requirements have recently been revised: they set a requirement at 0.1 mHz, with no additional explicit requirements at lower frequencies. This has implications for observations of the short-lived signals produced by the coalescence of massive and high-redshift binaries. Here we consider the most pessimistic scenario: the (unlikely) case in which LISA has no sensitivity below 0.1 mHz. We show that the presence of higher multipoles (beyond the dominant ℓ=|m|=2 mode) in the gravitational radiation from these systems, which will be detectable with a total signal-to-noise ratio ∼103, allows LISA to retain the capability to accurately measure the physical parameters and the redshift and to constrain the sky location. To illustrate this point, we consider a few select binaries in a total (redshifted) mass range of 4×106-4×107M whose (ℓ=|m|=2) gravitational-wave signals last between ≈ 12 h and ≈ 20 days in band. We model the emitted gravitational radiation using the highly accurate (spin-aligned) waveform approximant IMRPhenomXHM and carry out a fully coherent Bayesian analysis on the LISA noise-orthogonal time-delay-interferometry channels.
CITATION STYLE
Pratten, G., Klein, A., Moore, C. J., Middleton, H., Steinle, N., Schmidt, P., & Vecchio, A. (2023). LISA science performance in observations of short-lived signals from massive black hole binary coalescences. Physical Review D, 107(12). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.107.123026
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.