Mining information from binary black hole mergers: A comparison of estimation methods for complex exponentials in noise

Emanuele Berti, Vitor Cardoso, José A. González, and Ulrich Sperhake
Phys. Rev. D 75, 124017 – Published 21 June 2007

Abstract

The ringdown phase following a binary black hole merger is usually assumed to be well described by a linear superposition of complex exponentials (quasinormal modes). In the strong-field conditions typical of a binary black hole merger, nonlinear effects may produce mode coupling. Artificial mode coupling can also be induced by the black hole’s rotation, if the radiation field is expanded in terms of spin-weighted spherical harmonics (rather than spin-weighted spheroidal harmonics). Observing deviations from the predictions of linear black hole perturbation theory requires optimal fitting techniques to extract ringdown parameters from numerical waveforms, which are inevitably affected by numerical error. So far, nonlinear least-squares fitting methods have been used as the standard workhorse to extract frequencies from ringdown waveforms. These methods are known not to be optimal for estimating parameters of complex exponentials. Furthermore, different fitting methods have different performance in the presence of noise. The main purpose of this paper is to introduce the gravitational wave community to modern variations of a linear parameter estimation technique first devised in 1795 by Prony: the Kumaresan-Tufts and matrix pencil methods. Using “test” damped sinusoidal signals in Gaussian white noise we illustrate the advantages of these methods, showing that they have variance and bias at least comparable to standard nonlinear least-squares techniques. Then we compare the performance of different methods on unequal-mass binary black hole merger waveforms. The methods we discuss should be useful both theoretically (to monitor errors and search for nonlinearities in numerical relativity simulations) and experimentally (for parameter estimation from ringdown signals after a gravitational wave detection).

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  • Received 16 January 2007

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.75.124017

©2007 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Emanuele Berti*

  • McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences, Department of Physics, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130, USA

Vitor Cardoso

  • Department of Physics and Astronomy, The University of Mississippi, University, Mississippi 38677-1848, USA

José A. González and Ulrich Sperhake§

  • Theoretical Physics Institute, University of Jena, Max-Wien-Platz 1, 07743, Jena, Germany

  • *berti@wugrav.wustl.edu
  • Also at Centro de Física Computacional, Universidade de Coimbra, P-3004-516 Coimbra, Portugal. vcardoso@phy.olemiss.edu
  • jose.gonzalez@uni-jena.de
  • §Ulrich.Sperhake@uni-jena.de

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Vol. 75, Iss. 12 — 15 June 2007

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