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Forecasting the detection capabilities of third-generation gravitational-wave detectors using GWFAST

Francesco Iacovelli, Michele Mancarella, Stefano Foffa, Michele Maggiore

6/7/22 Published in : arXiv:2207.02771

We introduce \texttt{GWFAST}, a novel Fisher-matrix code for gravitational-wave studies, tuned toward third-generation gravitational-wave detectors such as Einstein Telescope (ET) and Cosmic Explorer (CE). We use it to perform a comprehensive study of the capabilities of ET alone, and of a network made by ET and two CE detectors, as well as to provide forecasts for the forthcoming O4 run of the LVK collaboration. We consider binary neutron stars, binary black holes and neutron star-black hole binaries, and compute basic metrics such as the distribution of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), the accuracy in the reconstruction of various parameters (including distance, sky localization, masses, spins and, for neutron stars, tidal deformabilities), and the redshift distribution of the detections for different thresholds in SNR and different levels of accuracy in localization and distance measurement. We examine the expected distribution and properties of `golden events', with especially large values of the SNR. We also pay special attention to the dependence of the results on astrophysical uncertainties and on various technical details (such as choice of waveforms, or the threshold in SNR), and we compare with other Fisher codes in the literature. In a companion paper we discuss the technical aspects of the code. Together with this paper, we publicly release the code \texttt{GWFAST} at this https URL, and the library \texttt{WF4Py} implementing state-of-the-art gravitational-wave waveforms in pure \texttt{Python} at this https URL.

Entire article

Research project(s)

  • Field Theory

Growth of Galaxies by Dark Matter Particle Capture

Supplement to "Forecasting the detection capabilities of third-generation gravitational-wave detectors using GWFAST": how to GWFAST

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