Quick recipes for gravitational-wave selection effects

Davide Gerosa*, Malvina Bellotti

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Accurate modeling of selection effects is a key ingredient to the success of gravitational-wave astronomy. The detection probability plays a crucial role in both statistical population studies, where it enters the hierarchical Bayesian likelihood, and astrophysical modeling, where it is used to convert predictions from population-synthesis codes into observable distributions. We review the most commonly used approximations, extend them, and present some recipes for a straightforward implementation. These include a closed-form expression capturing both multiple detectors and noise realizations written in terms of the so-called Marcum Q-function and a ready-to-use mapping between signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) thresholds and false-alarm rates from state-of-the-art detection pipelines. The bias introduced by approximating the matched filter SNR with the optimal SNR is not symmetric: sources that are nominally below threshold are more likely to be detected than sources above threshold are to be missed. Using both analytical considerations and software injections in detection pipelines, we confirm that including noise realizations when estimating the selection function introduces an average variation of a few %. This effect is most relevant for large catalogs and specific subpopulations of sources at the edge of detectability (e.g. high redshifts).
Original languageEnglish
Article number125002
Number of pages15
JournalClassical and Quantum Gravity
Volume41
Issue number12
Early online date14 May 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Jun 2024

Keywords

  • gravitational-wave observations
  • gravitational waves
  • gravitational-wave detectors

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