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Published November 15, 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Identifying strongly lensed gravitational waves through their phase consistency

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Strongly lensed gravitational waves (GWs) from binary coalescence manifest as repeated chirps from the original merger. At the detectors, the phase of the lensed GWs and its arrival time differences will be consistent modulo a fixed constant phase shift. We develop a fast and reliable method to efficiently reject event pairs that are not-lensed copies and appropriately rank the most interesting candidates. Our method exploits that detector phases are the best measured GW parameter, with errors only of a fraction of a radian and differences across the frequency band that are better measured than the chirp mass. The arrival time phase differences also avoid the shortcomings of looking for overlaps in highly non-Gaussian sky maps. Our basic statistic determining the consistency with lensing is the distance between the phase posteriors of two events and it directly provides information about the lens-source geometry which helps inform electromagnetic follow-ups. We demonstrate that for simulated signals of not-lensed binaries specifically chosen with many coincident properties so as to trigger false lensing alarms none of the pairs have phases closer than 3σ, and most cases reject the lensing hypothesis by 5σ. Looking at the latest catalog, GWTC3, we find that only 6% of the pairs are consistent with lensing at 99% confidence level. Moreover, we reject about half of the pairs that would otherwise favor lensing by their parameter overlaps and demonstrate good correlation with detailed joint parameter estimation results. This reduction of the false alarm rate will be of paramount importance in the upcoming observing runs and the eventual discovery of lensed GWs. Our code is publicly available and could be applied beyond lensing to test possible deviations in the phase evolution from modified theories of gravity and constrain GW birefringence.

Copyright and License

© 2023 American Physical Society.

Acknowledgement

We are grateful to Srashti Goyal for comments on the paper and Geraint Pattern for correspondence about the IMRPhenomX waveform family. J. M. E. is supported by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 847523 INTERACTIONS, and by VILLUM FONDEN (Grants No. 53101 and No. 37766). W. H. is supported by U.S. Dept. of Energy Contract No. DE-FG02-13ER41958 and the Simons Foundation. R. K. L. L. is supported by the National Science Foundation through Awards No. PHY-1912594 and No. PHY-2207758. This material is based upon work supported by NSF's LIGO Laboratory which is a major facility fully funded by the National Science Foundation. The authors are grateful for computational resources provided by the LIGO Laboratory and supported by National Science Foundation Grants No. PHY-0757058 and No. PHY-0823459.

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Additional details

Created:
December 19, 2023
Modified:
December 19, 2023