Archival Searches for Stellar-Mass Binary Black Holes in LISA Data

ORAL

Abstract

Stellar-mass binary black holes will sweep through the frequency band of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) for months to years before appearing in the audio-band of ground-based gravitational-wave detectors. One can expect several tens of these events up to a distance of 500 Mpc each year. The LISA signal-to-noise ratio for such sources even at these close distances will be too small for a blind search to confidently detect them. However, next generation ground-based gravitational-wave detectors, expected to be operational at the time of LISA, will observe them with signal-to-noise ratios of several thousands and measure their parameters very accurately. We show that such high-fidelity observations of these sources by ground-based detectors help in archival searches to dig tens of signals out of LISA data each year.

Authors

  • Rebecca Ewing

    Pennsylvania State University

  • Surabhi Sachdev

    Pennsylvania State University, The Pennsylvania State University

  • Ssohrab Borhanian

    Pennsylvania State University

  • B.S. Sathyaprakash

    Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania State University, Cardiff University