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Abstract We present a major update to the Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes (SXS) Collaboration’s catalog of binary black hole simulations. Using highly efficient spectral methods implemented in the Spectral Einstein Code (SpEC), we have nearly doubled the total number of binary configurations from 2,018 to 3,756. The catalog now more densely covers the parameter space with precessing simulations up to mass ratio q = 8 and dimensionless spins up to |χ⃗| ≤ 0.8 with near-zero eccentricity. The catalog also includes some simulations at higher mass ratios with moderate spin and more than 250 eccentric simulations. We have also deprecated and rerun some simulations from our previous catalog (e.g., simulations run with a much older version of SpEC or that had anomalously high errors in the waveform). The median waveform difference (which is similar to the mismatch) between resolutions over the simulations in the catalog is 4 × 10−4. The simulations have a median of 22 orbits, while the longest simulation has 148 orbits. We have corrected each waveform in the catalog to be in the binary’s center-of-mass frame and exhibit gravitational-wave memory. We estimate the total CPU cost of all simulations in the catalog to be 480,000,000 core-hours. We find that using spectral methods for binary black hole simulations is over 1,000 times more efficient than previously published finite-difference simulations. The full catalog is publicly available through the sxs Python package and at https://data.black-holes.org .more » « less
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Boschini, Matteo; Gerosa, Davide; Varma, Vijay; Armaza, Cristóbal; Boyle, Michael; Bonilla, Marceline S.; Ceja, Andrea; Chen, Yitian; Deppe, Nils; Giesler, Matthew; et al (, Physical Review D)
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Afshordi, Niayesh; Akçay, Sarp; Seoane, Pau Amaro; Antonelli, Andrea; Aurrekoetxea, Josu C; Barack, Leor; Barausse, Enrico; Benkel, Robert; Bernard, Laura; Bernuzzi, Sebastiano; et al (, Living Reviews in Relativity)Abstract LISA, the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, will usher in a new era in gravitational-wave astronomy. As the first anticipated space-based gravitational-wave detector, it will expand our view to the millihertz gravitational-wave sky, where a spectacular variety of interesting new sources abound: from millions of ultra-compact binaries in our Galaxy, to mergers of massive black holes at cosmological distances; from the early inspirals of stellar-mass black holes that will ultimately venture into the ground-based detectors’ view to the death spiral of compact objects into massive black holes, and many sources in between. Central to realising LISA’s discovery potential are waveform models, the theoretical and phenomenological predictions of the pattern of gravitational waves that these sources emit. This White Paper is presented on behalf of the Waveform Working Group for the LISA Consortium. It provides a review of the current state of waveform models for LISA sources, and describes the significant challenges that must yet be overcome.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
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