17 research outputs found
Magnetic tidal Love numbers clarified
In this brief note, we clarify certain aspects related to the magnetic (i.e.,
odd parity or axial) tidal Love numbers of a star in general relativity.
Magnetic tidal deformations of a compact star had been computed in 2009
independently by Damour and Nagar and by Binnington and Poisson. More recently,
Landry and Poisson showed that the magnetic tidal Love numbers depend on the
assumptions made on the fluid, in particular they are different (and of
opposite sign) if the fluid is assumed to be in static equilibrium or if it is
irrotational. We show that the zero-frequency limit of the Regge-Wheeler
equation forces the fluid to be irrotational. For this reason, the results of
Damour and Nagar are equivalent to those of Landry and Poisson for an
irrotational fluid, and are expected to be the most appropriate to describe
realistic configurations.Comment: v2: 4 pages, one extra equation. Matches the PRD versio
Spectroscopy of binary black hole ringdown using overtones and angular modes
The black hole uniqueness and the no-hair theorems imply that the quasinormal
spectrum of any astrophysical black hole is determined solely by its mass and
spin. The countably infinite number of quasinormal modes of a Kerr black hole
are thus related to each other and any deviations from these relations provide
a strong hint for physics beyond the general theory of relativity. To test the
no-hair theorem using ringdown signals, it is necessary to detect at least two
quasinormal modes. In particular, one can detect the fundamental mode along
with a subdominant overtone or with another angular mode, depending on the mass
ratio and the spins of the progenitor binary. Also in the light of the recent
discovery of GW190412, studying how the mass ratio affects the prospect of
black hole spectroscopy using overtones or angular modes is pertinent, and this
is the major focus of our study. First, we provide ready-to-use fits for the
amplitudes and phases of both the angular modes and overtones as a function of
mass ratio . Using these fits we estimate the minimum
signal-to-noise ratio for detectability, resolvability, and measurability of
subdominant modes/tones. We find that performing black-hole spectroscopy with
angular modes is preferable when the binary mass ratio is larger than (provided that the source is not located at a particularly disfavoured
inclination angle). For nonspinning, equal-mass binary black holes, the
overtones seem to be the only viable option to perform a spectroscopy test of
the no-hair theorem. However this would require a large ringdown
signal-to-noise ratio ( for a accuracy test with two
overtones) and the inclusion of more than one overtone to reduce modelling
errors, making black-hole spectroscopy with overtones impractical in the near
future.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures. Version consistent with PR
Novel Ringdown Amplitude-Phase Consistency Test
The ringdown signal emitted during a binary black hole coalescence can be modeled as a linear superposition of the characteristic damped modes of the remnant black hole that get excited during the merger phase. While checking the consistency of the measured frequencies and damping times against the Kerr BH spectrum predicted by general relativity (GR) is a cornerstone of strong-field tests of gravity, the consistency of measured excitation amplitudes and phases have been largely left unexplored. For a nonprecessing, quasicircular binary black hole merger, we find that GR predicts a narrow region in the space of mode amplitude ratio and phase difference, independently of the spin of the binary components. Using this unexpected result, we develop a new null test of strong-field gravity which demands that the measured amplitudes and phases of different ringdown modes should lie within this narrow region predicted by GR. We call this the amplitude-phase consistency test and introduce a procedure for performing it using information from the ringdown signal. Lastly, we apply this test to the GW190521 event, using the multimodal ringdown parameters inferred by Capano et al. [arXiv:2105.05238]. While ringdown measurements errors for this event are large, we show that GW190521 is consistent with the amplitude-phase consistency test. Our test is particularly well suited for accommodating multiple loud ringdown detections as those expected in the near future, and can be used complementarily to standard black-hole spectroscopy as a proxy for modified gravity, compact objects other than black holes, binary precession and eccentricity
Frequency-domain gravitational waves from non-precessing black-hole binaries. I. New numerical waveforms and anatomy of the signal
In this paper we discuss the anatomy of frequency-domain gravitational-wave
signals from non-precessing black-hole coalescences with the goal of
constructing accurate phenomenological waveform models. We first present new
numerical-relativity simulations for mass ratios up to 18 including spins. From
a comparison of different post-Newtonian approximants with numerical-relativity
data we select the uncalibrated SEOBNRv2 model as the most appropriate for the
purpose of constructing hybrid post-Newtonian/numerical-relativity waveforms,
and we discuss how we prepare time-domain and frequency-domain hybrid data
sets. We then use our data together with results in the literature to calibrate
simple explicit expressions for the final spin and radiated energy. Equipped
with our prediction for the final state we then develop a simple and accurate
merger-ringdown-model based on modified Lorentzians in the gravitational wave
amplitude and phase, and we discuss a simple method to represent the low
frequency signal augmenting the TaylorF2 post-Newtonian approximant with terms
corresponding to higher orders in the post-Newtonian expansion. We finally
discuss different options for modelling the small intermediate frequency regime
between inspiral and merger-ringdown. A complete phenomenological model based
on the present work is presented in a companion paper.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures ,minor edits to tex
Frequency-domain gravitational waves from non-precessing black-hole binaries. II. A phenomenological model for the advanced detector era
We present a new frequency-domain phenomenological model of the
gravitational-wave signal from the inspiral, merger and ringdown of
non-precessing (aligned-spin) black-hole binaries. The model is calibrated to
19 hybrid effective-one-body--numerical-relativity waveforms up to mass ratios
of 1:18 and black-hole spins of ( for equal-mass
systems). The inspiral part of the model consists of an extension of
frequency-domain post-Newtonian expressions, using higher-order terms fit to
the hybrids. The merger-ringdown is based on a phenomenological ansatz that has
been significantly improved over previous models. The model exhibits mismatches
of typically less than 1\% against all 19 calibration hybrids, and an
additional 29 verification hybrids, which provide strong evidence that, over
the calibration region, the model is sufficiently accurate for all relevant
gravitational-wave astronomy applications with the Advanced LIGO and Virgo
detectors. Beyond the calibration region the model produces physically
reasonable results, although we recommend caution in assuming that \emph{any}
merger-ringdown waveform model is accurate outside its calibration region. As
an example, we note that an alternative non-precessing model, SEOBNRv2
(calibrated up to spins of only 0.5 for unequal-mass systems), exhibits
mismatch errors of up to 10\% for high spins outside its calibration region. We
conclude that waveform models would benefit most from a larger number of
numerical-relativity simulations of high-aligned-spin unequal-mass binaries.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures, Updated coefficients tabl
Testing Gravity with Binary Black Hole Gravitational Waves
General Relativity (GR) remains the most accurate theory of gravity to date.
It has passed many experimental tests in the Solar System as well as binary
pulsar, cosmological and gravitational-wave (GW) observations. Some of these
tests probe regimes where gravitational fields are weak, the spacetime
curvature is small, and the characteristic velocities are not comparable to the
speed of light. Observations of compact binary coalescences enable us to test
GR in extreme environments of strong and dynamical gravitational fields, large
spacetime curvature, and velocities comparable to the speed of light. Since the
breakthrough observation of the first GW signal produced by the merger of two
black holes, GW150914, in September 2015, the number of confirmed detections of
binary mergers has rapidly increased to nearly 100. The analysis of these
events has already placed significant constraints on possible deviations from
GR and on the nature of the coalescing compact objects. In this chapter, we
discuss a selection of tests of GR applicable to observations of GWs from
compact binaries. In particular, we will cover consistency tests, which check
for consistency between the different phases of the binary's evolution, tests
of GW generation, polarization and propagation, and tests of the remnant's
nature. We conclude with a brief overview of the challenges and prospects for
present and future observatories.Comment: 36 pages, 8 figures, Review Chapter for the book "Recent Progress on
Gravity Tests" (Eds. C. Bambi and A. C\'ardenas-Avenda\~no, Springer
Singapore
First higher-multipole model of gravitational waves from spinning and coalescing black-hole binaries
Gravitational-wave observations of binary black holes currently rely on
theoretical models that predict the dominant multipoles (l,m) of the radiation
during inspiral, merger and ringdown. We introduce a simple method to include
the subdominant multipoles to binary black hole gravitational waveforms, given
a frequency-domain model for the dominant multipoles. The amplitude and phase
of the original model are appropriately stretched and rescaled using
post-Newtonian results (for the inspiral), perturbation theory (for the
ringdown), and a smooth transition between the two. No additional tuning to
numerical-relativity simulations is required. We apply a variant of this method
to the non-precessing PhenomD model. The result, PhenomHM, constitutes the
first higher-multipole model of spinning black-hole binaries, and currently
includes the (l,m) = (2,2), (3,3), (4,4), (2,1), (3,2), (4,3) radiative
moments. Comparisons with numerical-relativity waveforms demonstrate that
PhenomHM is more accurate than dominant-multipole-only models for all binary
configurations, and typically improves the measurement of binary properties.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The most powerful astrophysical events: Gravitational-wave peak luminosity of binary black holes as predicted by numerical relativity
For a brief moment, a binary black hole (BBH) merger can be the most powerful astrophysical event in the visible Universe. Here we present a model fit for this gravitational-wave peak luminosity of nonprecessing quasicircular BBH systems as a function of the masses and spins of the component black holes, based on numerical relativity (NR) simulations and the hierarchical fitting approach introduced by X. JimĂ©nez-Forteza et al. [Phys. Rev. D 95, 064024 (2017).]. This fit improves over previous results in accuracy and parameter-space coverage and can be used to infer posterior distributions for the peak luminosity of future astrophysical signals like GW150914 and GW151226. The model is calibrated to the ââ€6 modes of 378 nonprecessing NR simulations up to mass ratios of 18 and dimensionless spin magnitudes up to 0.995, and includes unequal-spin effects. We also constrain the fit to perturbative numerical results for large mass ratios. Studies of key contributions to the uncertainty in NR peak luminosities, such as (i) mode selection, (ii) finite resolution, (iii) finite extraction radius, and (iv) different methods for converting NR waveforms to luminosity, allow us to use NR simulations from four different codes as a homogeneous calibration set. This study of systematic fits to combined NR and large-mass-ratio data, including higher modes, also paves the way for improved inspiral-merger-ringdown waveform models
Hierarchical data-driven approach to fitting numerical relativity data for nonprecessing binary black holes with an application to final spin and radiated energy
Numerical relativity is an essential tool in studying the coalescence of binary black holes (BBHs). It is still computationally prohibitive to cover the BBH parameter space exhaustively, making phenomenological fitting formulas for BBH waveforms and final-state properties important for practical applications. We describe a general hierarchical bottom-up fitting methodology to design and calibrate fits to numerical relativity simulations for the three-dimensional parameter space of quasicircular nonprecessing merging BBHs, spanned by mass ratio and by the individual spin components orthogonal to the orbital plane. Particular attention is paid to incorporating the extreme-mass-ratio limit and to the subdominant unequal-spin effects. As an illustration of the method, we provide two applications, to the final spin and final mass (or equivalently: radiated energy) of the remnant black hole. Fitting to 427 numerical relativity simulations, we obtain results broadly consistent with previously published fits, but improving in overall accuracy and particularly in the approach to extremal limits and for unequal-spin configurations. We also discuss the importance of data quality studies when combining simulations from diverse sources, how detailed error budgets will be necessary for further improvements of these already highly accurate fits, and how this first detailed study of unequal-spin effects helps in choosing the most informative parameters for future numerical relativity runs
Ringdown overtones, black hole spectroscopy, and no-hair theorem tests
Validating the black-hole no-hair theorem with gravitational-wave observations of compact binary coalescences provides a compelling argument that the remnant object is indeed a black hole as described by the general theory of relativity. This requires performing a spectroscopic analysis of the post-merger signal and resolving the frequencies of either different angular modes or overtones (of the same angular mode). For a nearly-equal mass binary black-hole system, only the dominant angular mode (l=m=2) is sufficiently excited and the overtones are instrumental to perform this test. Here we investigate the robustness of modelling the post-merger signal of a binary black hole coalescence as a superposition of overtones. Further, we study the bias expected in the recovered frequencies as a function of the start time of a spectroscopic analysis and provide a computationally cheap procedure to choose it based on the interplay between the expected statistical error due to the detector noise and the systematic errors due to waveform modelling. Moreover, since the overtone frequencies are closely spaced, we find that resolving the overtones is particularly challenging and requires a loud ringdown signal. Rayleigh's resolvability criterion suggests that in an optimistic scenario a ringdown signal-to-noise ratio larger than âŒ30 (achievable possibly with LIGO at design sensitivity and routinely with future interferometers such as Einstein Telescope, Cosmic Explorer, and LISA) is necessary to resolve the overtone frequencies. We then conclude by discussing some conceptual issues associated with black-hole spectroscopy with overtones