GW151226: Observation of Gravitational Waves from a 22 Solar-mass Binary Black Hole Coalescence



Dated 15 June 2016. Read this summary in PDF format (in English) and in other languages: French | German | Italian | Spanish (pdf / html)

A few months after the first detection of gravitational waves from the black hole merger event GW150914, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) has made another observation of gravitational waves from the collision and merger of a pair of black holes. This signal, called GW151226, arrived at the LIGO detectors on 26 December 2015 at 03:38:53 UTC.

The signal, which came from a distance of around 1.4 billion light-years, was an example of a compact binary coalescence, when two extremely dense objects merge. Binary systems like this are one of many sources of gravitational waves for which the LIGO detectors are searching. Gravitational waves are ripples in space-time itself and carry energy away from such a binary system, causing the two objects to spiral towards each other as they orbit. This inspiral brings the objects closer and closer together until they merge. The gravitational waves produced by the binary stretch and squash space-time as they spread out through the universe. It is this stretching and squashing that can be detected by observatories like Advanced LIGO, and used to reveal information about the sources which created the gravitational waves.

GW151226 is the second definitive observation of a merging binary black hole system detected by the LIGO Scientific Collaboration and Virgo Collaboration. Together with GW150914, this event marks the beginning of gravitational-wave astronomy as a revolutionary new means to explore the frontiers of our Universe.

The signal

Just like the first detection, GW151226 was observed by the twin instruments of Advanced LIGO situated in Hanford, Washington and Livingston, Louisiana. Figure 1 shows the data as seen by the two instruments during the final second before the merger took place. The animation alternates between showing the raw detector data and the data after the best-matching signal has been removed, making it easier to identify. Even then, and unlike the first detection (where the signal of the event was very obvious against the background 'noise' of the instruments), in this case it is not immediately clear that there is a gravitational-wave signal embedded in the data. This is because GW151226 has a lower signal strength (referred to as the measured gravitational-wave strain). It is also harder to see as the signal is spread over a longer time, lasting 1 second compared to 0.2 seconds for the first detection. Despite the difficulty in spotting this event by eye, our detection software was able to find the signal in the data.

How was the detection made?

The first indication of the signal came from an online search method, which looks at detector data almost in real time as it is recorded. Figure 2 shows the results of one of the search methods. This analysis had identified GW151226 as a gravitational wave candidate within 70 seconds of its arrival at the Earth. About a minute later the first, rough estimates of the candidate's source properties had been calculated. These initial searches used a technique known as matched filtering to identify possible gravitational-wave signals. In this method, the data are compared to many predicted signals ('waveforms') in order to find the best match. If both detectors' data match a signal at the same time, then we have a gravitational wave candidate. Matched filtering was essential for both the detection and analysis of GW151226 due to its smaller signal strength compared with the first detection (GW150914).

The initial search analyses could only give approximate estimates for the properties of the source — including the masses of the two compact objects, their rotation rates and their orientation, distance and position on the sky. To determine these properties (known as 'parameters') more accurately, we used a different technique: we tested many different parameter combinations and each time checked how well the predicted waveform for that combination matched the signal we had seen. This approach allows us to build up a map of the different sets of parameters which could explain our observation, and figure out the probability of each set being the correct one. Figure 3 shows the excellent agreement between the reconstructed gravitational-wave signal (as observed by the Livingston detector), generated using a range of the most probable parameters, compared with a signal calculated from a numerical solution of Einstein's equations of general relativity.

How can we be sure this was a real event?

Just as we did for the first detection, many checks were carried out on the detectors to ensure that no environmental or instrumental effects could have caused the signal. These effects could be anything from misbehaving refrigerators to far-away lightning strikes! During the time of the event, there were no such disturbances large enough to explain GW151226, so we concluded that the signal must have had an astrophysical origin.

So what did we see?

By comparing millions of predicted signals to the data, we can find which combinations of the binary parameters are able to describe the signal. Figure 4 shows the distribution of probable combinations of masses for the binary inferred by this method. From this figure we can tell with 99% certainty that the mass of the smaller object cannot be less than 4.5 times the mass of the Sun, which is well above the largest theoretical mass of a neutron star. Therefore we can be confident that we have observed a binary black hole! The distribution of the mass combinations for the two black holes are centered at about 14 and 8 times the mass of the Sun respectively. After the merger, the resulting black hole has a mass of about 21 times the mass of the Sun.

The black holes can be spinning as they orbit each other — just like the Earth rotates on its own axis. This rotation can be tilted at different angles compared to the orbital motion; for the Earth this tilt gives us different seasons. How quickly the black holes are rotating (the spin magnitude) and how much they are tilted (the spin misalignment) will also affect the length of the observed signal. If the spins are large and rotating in the same direction as the black holes are orbiting each other, then the two black holes can get very close to each other before they merge. If on the other hand, the black holes are spinning in the opposite sense to their orbital rotation, then they will merge at a greater separation, thus giving rise to a shorter gravitational-wave signal. When the spins and the orbit rotations are not aligned, the whole binary will be wobbling as it spirals towards merger (this is called spin-precession).

Figure 5 shows the combination of spin magnitudes and misalignments which can describe the data. We find that the primary black hole (the more massive of the two) is more probable to be spinning in the same direction as the orbital motion. However we cannot tell how it is tilted. This figure also shows that we are unable to put any significant constraint on the spin of the less massive black hole.

After the merger the final black hole is also rotating. We find that this new black hole is spinning at 70% of its maximum possible value.

The final black hole mass is lower than the sum of the two initial black holes as some mass is converted directly into gravitational-wave energy during the inspiral and merger. The mass difference is equivalent to converting about the mass of our Sun into energy radiated as gravitational waves. At its peak, the gravitational-wave power emitted from the binary was greater than the combined light power (what astronomers call luminosity) of all the stars and galaxies in the observable Universe!

We can also tell that this merger took place at a distance of around 1.4 billion light-years — so these gravitational waves have travelled a similar distance as those which came from the first detection, GW150914.

We can use the difference in arrival time of gravitational waves at each detector to 'triangulate' the position of a gravitational-wave source on the sky. However, with only the two LIGO detectors our estimate of the sky position is typically very crude. For GW151226 we could localize its position to within 850 square degrees on the sky — about 4000 times the area of the full moon. The precision of this triangulation method will be greatly improved with the addition of more gravitational-wave detectors in future; for more details see this article.

GW151226 spent about 1 second in the detectors' sensitive band of frequencies, making it a much longer signal than the first detection which lasted only 0.2 seconds. This longer duration is due to the lower mass black holes in this binary system: more of the inspiral phase of the event could be seen in the LIGO detectors' sensitive band. A longer inspiral also means that GW151226 can be used to place better constraints on any violations of general relativity. We do not find any hints that Einstein was wrong.

What does GW151226 mean for astrophysics?

GW151226 is the first direct observation of a binary black hole in this range of masses. As binary black holes are not expected to emit any light, the gravitational waves which they emit allow us to find new binary black hole systems which could not be observed directly by any other means. That said, we can compare our results against other types of observations. For example the masses we measure are consistent with masses of black holes found in a different kind of astronomical system, X-ray binaries. However here for the first time we have observed two black holes in this mass range in a binary together.

Binary black holes can form in a number of ways. They could have originated as two massive stars which were born together and evolved together to become a pair of black holes at the end of their lives. Alternatively, in areas of the Universe where individual stars are more densely packed, a black hole binary could be formed from two individual objects interacting with each other to become a binary system later in their lives. The properties of GW151226 are consistent with both of these formation scenarios, so for the moment we cannot favour one of them over the other.

However, both GW151226 and GW150914 indicate there could be many more stellar-mass binary black holes in the Universe than previously expected. These initial detections are an important first step towards understanding more about the population of these binaries, which until now has been completely hidden from us.

Key points

The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and Virgo Collaboration have observed another merging binary black hole system, detected by Advanced LIGO. The observations of GW151226 and GW150914 together indicate a population of binary black holes in the Universe. Gravitational-wave observations have, therefore, been able to confirm the existence of black holes and provide a new view into the mysteries of the Universe. The era of gravitational-wave astronomy has truly begun!

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