Using Gravitational‐Wave Standard Sirens
Los Alamos National Laboratory · University of Chicago · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Gravitational waves (GWs) from supermassive binary black hole (BBH) inspirals are potentially powerful standard sirens (the GW analog to standard candles) (Schutz 1986, 2002). Because these systems are well-modeled, the space-based GW observatory LISA will be able to measure the luminosity distance (but not the redshift) to some distant massive BBH systems with 1-10% accuracy. This accuracy is largely limited by pointing error: GW sources generally are poorly localized on the sky. Localizing the binary independently (e.g., through association with an electromagnetic counterpart) greatly reduces this positional error. An electromagnetic counterpart may also allow determination of the event's redshift. In this…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.92
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 51
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Cosmic distance ladder
- Physics
- Gravitational wave
- Luminosity distance
- Redshift
- Observatory
- Binary black hole
- Gravitational lens