Published October 15, 2010 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Improved time-domain accuracy standards for model gravitational waveforms

Abstract

Model gravitational waveforms must be accurate enough to be useful for detection of signals and measurement of their parameters, so appropriate accuracy standards are needed. Yet these standards should not be unnecessarily restrictive, making them impractical for the numerical and analytical modelers to meet. The work of Lindblom, Owen, and Brown [Phys. Rev. D 78, 124020 (2008)] is extended by deriving new waveform accuracy standards which are significantly less restrictive while still ensuring the quality needed for gravitational-wave data analysis. These new standards are formulated as bounds on certain norms of the time-domain waveform errors, which makes it possible to enforce them in situations where frequency-domain errors may be difficult or impossible to estimate reliably. These standards are less restrictive by about a factor of 20 than the previously published time-domain standards for detection, and up to a factor of 60 for measurement. These new standards should therefore be much easier to use effectively.

Additional Information

© 2010 American Physical Society. Received 10 August 2010; published 12 October 2010. We thank Michael Holst for valuable discussions about rigorous mathematical error bounds, Sean McWilliams for other useful discussions, and Duncan Brown for helpful comments on an earlier draft of this paper. This research was supported in part by grants to Caltech from the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, NSF Grants No. DMS-0553302, No. PHY-0601459, and No. PHY-0652995, and NASA Grant No. NNX09AF97G; by NASA Grants No. 08-ATFP08-0126 and No. 09-ATP09-0136 to Goddard Space Flight Center; by NSF Grant No. PHY- 0855589 to Penn State; and by the LIGO Visitors Program. LIGO was constructed by the California Institute of Technology and Massachusetts Institute of Technology with funding from the National Science Foundation and operates under cooperative agreement PHY-0757058. This paper has LIGO Document No. LIGO-P1000078.

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
20637
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20101102-093727097

Funding

Sherman Fairchild Foundation
NSF
DMS-0553302
NSF
PHY-0601459
NSF
PHY-0652995
NASA
NNX09AF97G
NASA
08-ATFP08-0126
NASA
09-ATP09-0136
NSF
PHY-0855589
LIGO Visitors Program

Dates

Created
2010-11-02
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2021-11-09
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
TAPIR
Other Numbering System Name
LIGO Document No.
Other Numbering System Identifier
LIGO-P1000078