381 research outputs found
Quasinormal modes of slowly-rotating black holes in dynamical Chern-Simons gravity
The detection of gravitational waves from compact binary mergers by the LIGO/Virgo collaboration has, for the first time, allowed us to test relativistic gravity in its strong, dynamical and nonlinear regime, thus opening a new arena to confront general relativity (and modifications thereof) against observations. We consider a theory which modifies general relativity by introducing a scalar field coupled to a parity-violating curvature term known as dynamical Chern-Simons gravity. In this theory, spinning black holes are different from their general relativistic counterparts and can thus serve as probes to this theory. We study linear gravito-scalar perturbations of black holes in dynamical Chern-Simons gravity at leading-order in spin and (i) obtain the perturbed field equations describing the evolution of the perturbed gravitational and scalar fields, (ii) numerically solve these equations by direct integration to calculate the quasinormal mode frequencies for the dominant and higher multipoles and tabulate them, (iii) find strong evidence that these rotating black holes are linearly stable, and (iv) present general fitting functions for different multipoles for gravitational and scalar quasinormal mode frequencies in terms of spin and Chern-Simons coupling parameter. Our results can be used to validate the ringdown of small-spin remnants of numerical relativity simulations of black hole binaries in dynamical Chern-Simons gravity and pave the way towards future tests of this theory with gravitational wave ringdown observations
Spin-induced dynamical scalarization, de-scalarization and stealthness in scalar-Gauss-Bonnet gravity during black hole coalescence
Particular couplings between a scalar field and the Gauss-Bonnet invariant lead to spontaneous scalarization of black holes. Here we continue our work on simulating this phenomenon in the context of binary black hole systems. We consider a negative coupling for which the black-hole spin plays a major role in the scalarization process. We find two main phenomena: (i) dynamical descalarization, in which initially scalarized black holes form an unscalarized remnant, and (ii) dynamical scalarization, whereby the late merger of initially unscalarized black holes can cause scalar hair to grow. An important consequence of the latter case is that modifications to the gravitational waveform due to the scalar field may only occur post-merger, as its presence is hidden during the entirety of the inspiral. However, with a sufficiently strong coupling, we find that scalarization can occur before the remnant has even formed. We close with a discussion of observational implications for gravitational-wave tests of general relativity
Improved gravitational-wave constraints on higher-order curvature theories of gravity
Gravitational wave observations of compact binaries allow us to test general relativity (and modifications thereof) in the strong and highly-dynamical field regime of gravity. Here we confront two extensions to general relativity, dynamical Chern-Simons and Einstein-dilaton-Gauss-Bonnet theories, against the gravitational wave sources from the GWTC-1 and GWTC-2 catalogs by the LIGO-Virgo Collaboration. By stacking the posterior of individual events, we strengthen the constraint on the square root of the coupling parameter in Einstein-dilaton-Gauss-Bonnet gravity to km, but we are unable to place meaningful constraints on dynamical Chern-Simons gravity. Importantly, we also show that our bounds are robust to (i) the choice of general-relativity base waveform model, upon which we add modifications, (ii) unknown higher post-Newtonian order terms in the modifications to general relativity, (iii) the small-coupling approximation, and (iv) uncertainties on the nature of the constituent compact objects
Black hole sensitivities in Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet gravity
The post-Newtonian dynamics of black hole binaries in Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet theories of gravity depends on the so-called "sensitivities", quantities which characterize a black hole's adiabatic response to the time-dependent scalar field environment sourced by its companion. In this work, we calculate numerically the sensitivities of nonrotating black holes, including spontaneously scalarized ones, in three classes of Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet gravity: the shift-symmetric, dilatonic and Gaussian theories. When possible, we compare our results against perturbative analytical results, finding excellent agreement. Unlike their general relativistic counterparts, black holes in Einstein-scalar-Gauss-Bonnet gravity only exist in a restricted parameter space controlled by the theory's coupling constant. A preliminary study of the role played by the sensitivities in black hole binaries suggests that, in principle, black holes can be driven outside of their domain of existence during the inspiral, for binary parameters which we determine
The Role of Strong Gravity and the Nuclear Equation of State on Neutron-Star Common-Envelope Accretion
Common-envelope evolution is important in the formation of neutron star binaries within the isolated binary formation channel. As a neutron star inspirals within the envelope of a primary massive star, it accretes and spins up. Because neutron stars are in the strong-gravity regime, they have a substantial relativistic mass deficit, i.e., their gravitational mass is less than their baryonic mass. This effect causes some fraction of the accreted baryonic mass to convert into neutron star binding energy. The relativistic mass deficit also depends on the nuclear equation of state, since more compact neutron stars will have larger binding energies. We model the mass growth and spin-up of neutron stars inspiraling within common-envelope environments and quantify how different initial binary conditions and hadronic equations of state affect the post-common-envelope neutron star's mass and spin. From these models, we find that neutron star mass growth is suppressed by . We also find that for a given amount of accreted baryonic mass, more compact neutron stars will spin-up faster while gaining less gravitational mass, and vice versa. This work demonstrates that a neutron star's strong gravity and nuclear microphysics plays a role in neutron-star-common-envelope evolution, in addition to the macroscopic astrophysics of the envelope. Strong gravity and the nuclear equation of state may thus affect both the population properties of neutron star binaries and the cosmic double neutron star merger rate
Astrophysical and theoretical physics implications from multimessenger neutron star observations
The Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) recently measured the mass and equatorial radius of the isolated neutron star PSR J0030+0451. We use these measurements to infer the moment of inertia, the quadrupole moment, and the surface eccentricity of an isolated neutron star for the first time, using relations between these quantities that are insensitive to the unknown equation of state of supranuclear matter. We also use these results to forecast the moment of inertia of neutron star A in the double pulsar binary J0737-3039, a quantity anticipated to be directly measured in the coming decade with radio observations. Combining this information with the measurement of the tidal Love number with LIGO/Virgo observations, we propose and implement the first theory-agnostic and equation-of-state-insensitive test of general relativity. Specializing these constraints to a particular modified theory, we find that consistency with general relativity places the most stringent constraint on gravitational parity violation to date, surpassing all other previously reported bounds by seven orders of magnitude and opens the path for future a test of general relativity with multimessenger neutron star observations
Slowly Rotating Black Holes in Dynamical Chern-Simons Gravity: Deformation Quadratic in the Spin
We derive a stationary and axisymmetric black hole solution to quadratic
order in the spin angular momentum. The previously found, linear-in-spin terms
modify the odd-parity sector of the metric, while the new corrections appear in
the even-parity sector. These corrections modify the quadrupole moment, as well
as the (coordinate-dependent) location of the event horizon and the ergoregion.
Although the linear-in-spin metric is of Petrov type D, the quadratic order
terms render it of type I. The metric does not possess a second-order Killing
tensor or a Carter-like constant. The new metric does not possess closed
timelike curves or spacetime regions that violate causality outside of the
event horizon. The new, even-parity modifications to the Kerr metric decay less
rapidly at spatial infinity than the leading-order in spin, odd-parity ones,
and thus, the former are more important when considering black holes that are
rotating moderately fast. We calculate the modifications to the Hamiltonian,
binding energy and Kepler's third law. These modifications are crucial for the
construction of gravitational wave templates for black hole binaries, which
will enter at second post-Newtonian order, just like dissipative modifications
found previously.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures; Typos correcte
Observable Signatures of EMRI Black Hole Binaries Embedded in Thin Accretion Disks
We examine the electromagnetic (EM) and gravitational wave (GW) signatures of
stellar-mass compact objects (COs) spiraling into a supermassive black hole
(extreme mass-ratio inspirals or EMRIs), embedded in a thin, radiation-pressure
dominated, accretion disk. At large separations, the tidal effect of the
secondary CO clears a gap. We show that the gap refills during the late
GW-driven phase of the inspiral, leading to a sudden EM brightening of the
source. The accretion disk leaves an imprint on the GW through its angular
momentum exchange with the binary, the mass increase of the binary members due
to accretion, and its gravity. We compute the disk-modified GWs both in an
analytical Newtonian approximation and in a numerical effective-one-body
approach. We find that disk-induced migration provides the dominant
perturbation to the inspiral, with weaker effects from the mass accretion onto
the CO and hydrodynamic drag. Depending on whether a gap is present, the
perturbation of the GW phase is between 10 and 1000 radians per year,
detectable with the future Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) at high
significance. The Fourier transform of the disk-modified GW in the stationary
phase approximation is sensitive to disk parameters with a frequency trend
different from post-Newtonian vacuum corrections. Our results suggest that
observations of EMRIs may place new sensitive constraints on the physics of
accretion disks.Comment: 42 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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