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Published December 22, 2010 | Published
Journal Article Open

Length requirements for numerical-relativity waveforms

Abstract

One way to produce complete inspiral-merger-ringdown gravitational waveforms from black-hole-binary systems is to connect post-Newtonian (PN) and numerical-relativity (NR) results to create "hybrid" waveforms. Hybrid waveforms are central to the construction of some phenomenological models for gravitational-wave (GW) search templates, and for tests of GW search pipelines. The dominant error source in hybrid waveforms arises from the PN contribution, and can be reduced by increasing the number of NR GW cycles that are included in the hybrid. Hybrid waveforms are considered sufficiently accurate for GW detection if their mismatch error is below 3% (i.e., a fitting factor above 0.97). We address the question of the length requirements of NR waveforms such that the final hybrid waveforms meet this requirement, considering nonspinning binaries with q=M_2/M_1 ∈ [1,4] and equal-mass binaries with χ=Si/Mi_2 ∈ [-0.5,0.5]. We conclude that, for the cases we study, simulations must contain between three (in the equal-mass nonspinning case) and ten (the χ=0.5 case) orbits before merger, but there is also evidence that these are the regions of parameter space for which the least number of cycles will be needed.

Additional Information

© 2010 American Physical Society. Received 16 September 2010; published 22 December 2010. We thank Steve Fairhurst and Harald Pfeiffer for useful discussions, and Sukanta Bose and Doreen Müller for helpful comments on the manuscript. M. Hannam was supported by an FWF Lise-Meitner Fellowship (M1178- N16) and a Science and Technology Facilities Council Advanced Fellowship (ST/H008438/1). S. Husa was supported by Grant No. FPA-2007-60220 from the Spanish Ministry of Science, the Spanish MICINNs Consolider-Ingenio 2010 Programme under grant MultiDark CSD2009-00064, and DAAD Grant No. D/07/13385. F. Ohme thanks the IMPRS for Gravitational Wave Astronomy and the DLR (Deutsches Zentrum für Luftund Raumfahrt) for support. P. A. was supported in part by NSF Grants No. PHY-0653653 and No. PHY-0601459, and the David and Barbara Groce Fund at Caltech. BAM simulations were carried out at LRZ Munich, ICHEC Dublin, the Vienna Scientific Cluster (VSC), at MareNostrum at Barcelona Supercomputing Center—Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (Spanish National Supercomputing Center), and CESGA, Santiago the Compostela.

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August 19, 2023
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