Binary Inspirals and Compact Mergers
When two compact objects orbit each other, gravitational-wave emission steadily shrinks their orbit until they merge; these inspirals and mergers are the dominant signals seen by ground-based detectors.
Definition
A binary inspiral and merger is the coalescence of two compact objects, black holes or neutron stars, that spiral together through loss of orbital energy to gravitational waves, producing a characteristic chirp followed by merger and the ringdown of the remnant.
Scope
This topic covers the three phases of a compact-binary coalescence, inspiral, merger, and ringdown, the chirp signal of rising frequency and amplitude, the post-Newtonian and numerical-relativity modeling of the waveform, the information encoded about masses, spins, and the neutron-star equation of state, and the landmark detections of black-hole and neutron-star mergers.
Core questions
- What are the inspiral, merger, and ringdown phases of a compact-binary coalescence?
- How is the waveform used to measure the masses and spins of the objects?
- What did the first black-hole and neutron-star merger detections reveal?
Key concepts
- Inspiral, merger, ringdown
- Chirp signal and chirp mass
- Post-Newtonian approximation
- Numerical relativity waveforms
- Spin and mass measurement
- Kilonova and multi-messenger follow-up
Key theories
- Inspiral-merger-ringdown waveform
- The signal rises in frequency and amplitude during the inspiral (a 'chirp'), peaks at merger, and decays as the remnant rings down to a stationary black hole, a sequence modeled by combining post-Newtonian theory with numerical relativity.
- Multi-messenger neutron-star mergers
- The 2017 binary neutron-star detection was accompanied by a gamma-ray burst and an optical kilonova, confirming neutron-star mergers as sites of heavy-element production and launching multi-messenger astronomy.
Clinical relevance
Compact-binary detections have become a precision tool: they confirm the existence and demographics of black holes, test general relativity through the consistency of inspiral and ringdown, constrain the neutron-star equation of state, and offer a standard-siren route to measuring the expansion rate of the universe.
History
Decades of post-Newtonian theory and the 2005 numerical-relativity breakthroughs produced accurate merger waveforms in advance; the 2015 detection GW150914 of a black-hole merger and the 2017 neutron-star merger GW170817, observed across the electromagnetic spectrum, established gravitational-wave astronomy as a routine observational science.
Key figures
- Kip Thorne
- Rainer Weiss
- Bernard Schutz
- Frans Pretorius
Related topics
Seminal works
- abbott2016
- abbott2017
Frequently asked questions
- Why is the signal called a chirp?
- As the two objects spiral inward, they orbit faster and emit gravitational waves of rising frequency and amplitude, so the signal sweeps upward in pitch like a bird's chirp when shifted into the audible range, ending abruptly at merger.
- What made the 2017 neutron-star merger so important?
- It was detected in gravitational waves and across the electromagnetic spectrum simultaneously, confirming that such mergers produce short gamma-ray bursts and forge heavy elements like gold, and providing an independent measurement of the universe's expansion.