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Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 201102 (2007) [4 pages]

Prospects for Detection of Gravitational Waves from Intermediate-Mass-Ratio Inspirals

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Duncan A. Brown1,2,3, Jeandrew Brink2, Hua Fang2, Jonathan R. Gair4, Chao Li2, Geoffrey Lovelace2, Ilya Mandel2, and Kip S. Thorne2
1LIGO Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA
2Theoretical Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA
3Department of Physics, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA
4Institute of Astronomy, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 0HA, United Kingdom

Received 11 December 2006; revised 4 May 2007; published 16 November 2007

We explore prospects for detecting gravitational waves from stellar-mass compact objects spiraling into intermediate mass black holes (BHs) M∼50M to 350M) with ground-based observatories. We estimate a rate for such intermediate-mass-ratio inspirals of ≲1–30  yr-1 in Advanced LIGO. We show that if the central body is not a BH but its metric is stationary, axisymmetric, reflection symmetric and asymptotically flat, then the waves will likely be triperiodic, as for a BH. We suggest that the evolutions of the waves’ three fundamental frequencies and of the complex amplitudes of their spectral components encode (in principle) details of the central body’s metric, the energy and angular momentum exchange between the central body and the orbit, and the time-evolving orbital elements. We estimate that advanced ground-based detectors can constrain central body deviations from a BH with interesting accuracy.

© 2007 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevLett.99.201102
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevLett.99.201102
PACS:
04.80.Nn, 04.25.Nx, 04.30.Db