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Autors principals: Castelli, Eleonora, Baghi, Quentin, Baker, John G., Slutsky, Jacob, Bobin, Jérôme, Karnesis, Nikolaos, Petiteau, Antoine, Sauter, Orion, Wass, Peter, Weber, William J.
Format: Preprint
Publicat: 2024
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Accés en línia:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.13402
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author Castelli, Eleonora
Baghi, Quentin
Baker, John G.
Slutsky, Jacob
Bobin, Jérôme
Karnesis, Nikolaos
Petiteau, Antoine
Sauter, Orion
Wass, Peter
Weber, William J.
author_facet Castelli, Eleonora
Baghi, Quentin
Baker, John G.
Slutsky, Jacob
Bobin, Jérôme
Karnesis, Nikolaos
Petiteau, Antoine
Sauter, Orion
Wass, Peter
Weber, William J.
contents The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission is being developed by ESA with NASA participation. As it has recently passed the Mission Adoption milestone, models of the instruments and noise performance are becoming more detailed, and likewise prototype data analyses must as well. Assumptions such as Gaussianity, stationarity, and data continuity are unrealistic, and must be replaced with physically motivated data simulations, and data analysis methods adapted to accommodate such likely imperfections. To this end, the LISA Data Challenges have produced datasets featuring time-varying and unequal constellation armlength, and measurement artifacts including data interruptions and instrumental transients. In this work, we assess the impact of these data artifacts on the inference of Galactic Binary and Massive Black Hole properties. Our analysis shows that the treatment of noise transients and gaps is necessary for effective parameter estimation, as they substantially corrupt the analysis if unmitigated. We find that straightforward mitigation techniques can significantly if imperfectly suppress artifacts. For the Galactic Binaries, mitigation of glitches was essentially total, while mitigations of the data gaps increased parameter uncertainty by approximately 10%. For the Massive Black Hole binaries the particularly pernicious glitches resulted in a 30% uncertainty increase after mitigations, while the data gaps can increase parameter uncertainty by up to several times. Critically, this underlines the importance of early detection of transient gravitational waves to ensure they are protected from planned data interruptions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_13402
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Extraction of gravitational wave signals from LISA data in the presence of artifacts
Castelli, Eleonora
Baghi, Quentin
Baker, John G.
Slutsky, Jacob
Bobin, Jérôme
Karnesis, Nikolaos
Petiteau, Antoine
Sauter, Orion
Wass, Peter
Weber, William J.
General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission is being developed by ESA with NASA participation. As it has recently passed the Mission Adoption milestone, models of the instruments and noise performance are becoming more detailed, and likewise prototype data analyses must as well. Assumptions such as Gaussianity, stationarity, and data continuity are unrealistic, and must be replaced with physically motivated data simulations, and data analysis methods adapted to accommodate such likely imperfections. To this end, the LISA Data Challenges have produced datasets featuring time-varying and unequal constellation armlength, and measurement artifacts including data interruptions and instrumental transients. In this work, we assess the impact of these data artifacts on the inference of Galactic Binary and Massive Black Hole properties. Our analysis shows that the treatment of noise transients and gaps is necessary for effective parameter estimation, as they substantially corrupt the analysis if unmitigated. We find that straightforward mitigation techniques can significantly if imperfectly suppress artifacts. For the Galactic Binaries, mitigation of glitches was essentially total, while mitigations of the data gaps increased parameter uncertainty by approximately 10%. For the Massive Black Hole binaries the particularly pernicious glitches resulted in a 30% uncertainty increase after mitigations, while the data gaps can increase parameter uncertainty by up to several times. Critically, this underlines the importance of early detection of transient gravitational waves to ensure they are protected from planned data interruptions.
title Extraction of gravitational wave signals from LISA data in the presence of artifacts
topic General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.13402