학술논문

Catalog variance of testing general relativity with gravitational-wave data
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Physical Review D 109.8, L081302 (2024)
Subject
General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability
Language
Abstract
Combining multiple gravitational-wave observations allows for stringent tests of general relativity, targeting effects that would otherwise be undetectable using single-event analyses. We highlight how the finite size of the observed catalog induces a significant source of variance. If not appropriately accounted for, general relativity can be excluded with arbitrarily large credibility even if it is the underlying theory of gravity. This effect is generic and holds for arbitrarily large catalogs. Moreover, we show that it cannot be suppressed by selecting "golden" observations with large signal-to-noise ratios. We present a mitigation strategy based on bootstrapping (i.e. resampling with repetition) that allows assigning uncertainties to one's credibility on the targeted test. We demonstrate our findings using both toy models and real gravitational-wave data. In particular, we quantify the impact of the catalog variance on the ringdown properties of black holes using the latest LIGO/Virgo catalog.
Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; v2: matches published version