论文标题
关于通过强力透镜合并黑洞事件的检测和精确定位
On the detection and precise localisation of merging black holes events through strong gravitational lensing
论文作者
论文摘要
为了解锁引力波检测的全体物理和宇宙学应用,必须将相关的黑洞合并定位到其宿主星系内高精度。实现此目的的一种可能方法是比较重力静电二进制黑孔合并事件的多个检测的特性与位于引力波检测的关节天空定位中的强重力透镜系统的性质。在这项工作中,我们模拟了由星系尺度镜头镜头的二元黑洞合并镜头的种群,并在未来十年被Ligo-Virgo-Kagra检测到,以及欧几里得将检测到的星系尺度强镜的种群。我们使用这些仿真来研究在“欧几里德”星系尺度强透镜的镜头星系内强烈透明二元黑洞合并的前景。我们发现,对于20-50%的强烈镜头引力事件,如果该事件落在其调查足迹中,则可以用欧几球检测到镜头系统。其中,我们希望正确地识别强镜的宿主星系(后验概率)宿主星系 - 基于贝叶斯证据的候选宿主的排名 - 在给定A-6-21.9%的四镜重力 - 重力波事件中为34.6-21.9%。对于三重和双镜头重力波事件,这分别为29.8-14.9%和16.4-6.6%。但是,如果成功识别,则本地化可以比宿主 - 半元素大小的一部分更好,即毫米级的阶数。然而,在未来十年中,首次检测可能需要专门的深层和高分辨率随访,并在当前和计划的重力波探测器中继续升级。
To unlock the full spectrum of astrophysical and cosmological applications of gravitational-wave detections, it is essential to localise the associated black-hole mergers to high precision inside their host galaxies. One possible method to achieve this is to compare the properties of multiple detections of gravitationally-lensed binary black-hole merger events with the properties of strong gravitational lens systems located in the joint sky localisation of the gravitational-wave detections. In this work, we simulate the population of binary black-hole mergers lensed by galaxy-scale lenses and detectable by LIGO-Virgo-Kagra in the coming decade and the population of galaxy-scale strong lenses that will be detected by Euclid. We use these simulations to investigate the prospects for localising strongly lensed binary black-hole mergers inside the lensed galaxies of 'Euclid-like' galaxy-scale strong lenses. We find that for 20-50% of strongly lensed gravitational wave events the lens system is detectable with Euclid, if the event falls in its survey footprint. Of these, we expect to correctly identify the strongly-lensed host galaxy as likely (with posterior probability) host galaxy - based on Bayesian evidence ranking of candidate hosts - for 34.6-21.9% of quadruply-lensed gravitational-wave events when given an a-priori 1-5 deg^2 gravitational-wave-only sky localisation. For triply and doubly lensed gravitational-wave events, this becomes 29.8-14.9% and 16.4-6.6% respectively. If successfully identified, however, the localisation can be better than a fraction of the host-galaxy size, i.e. of order milli-arcseconds. A first detection in the coming decade, however, probably requires dedicated deep and high-resolution follow-ups and continued upgrades in the current and planned gravitational-wave detectors.