Disks, spikes, and clouds: distinguishing environmental effects on BBH gravitational waveforms [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2211.01362


Future gravitational wave interferometers such as LISA, Taiji, DECIGO, and TianQin, will enable precision studies of the environment surrounding black holes. In this paper, we study intermediate and extreme mass ratio binary black hole inspirals, and consider three possible environments surrounding the primary black hole: accretion disks, dark matter spikes, and clouds of ultra-light scalar fields, also known as gravitational atoms. We present a Bayesian analysis of the detectability and measurability of these three environments. Focusing for concreteness on the case of a detection with LISA, we show that the characteristic imprint they leave on the gravitational waveform would allow us to identify the environment that generated the signal, and to accurately reconstruct its model parameters.

Read this paper on arXiv…

P. Cole, G. Bertone, A. Coogan, et. al.
Thu, 3 Nov 22
7/59

Comments: 8 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables plus appendices