485 research outputs found
Testing strong gravity with gravitational waves and Love numbers
The LIGO observation of GW150914 has inaugurated the gravitational-wave astronomy era and the possibility of testing gravity in extreme regimes. While distorted black holes are the most convincing sources of gravitational waves, similar signals might be produced also by other compact objects. In particular, we discuss what the gravitational-wave ringdown could tell us about the nature of the emitting object, and how measurements of the tidal Love numbers could help us in understanding the internal structure of compact dark objects
Ergoregion instability of exotic compact objects: electromagnetic and gravitational perturbations and the role of absorption
Spinning horizonless compact objects may be unstable against an “ergoregion instability.” We investigate this mechanism for electromagnetic perturbations of ultracompact Kerr-like objects with a reflecting surface, extending previous (numerical and analytical) work limited to the scalar case. We derive an analytical result for the frequency and the instability timescale of unstable modes which is valid at small frequencies. We argue that our analysis can be directly extended to gravitational perturbations of exotic compact objects in the black-hole limit. The instability for electromagnetic and gravitational perturbations is generically stronger than in the scalar case, and it requires larger absorption to be quenched. We argue that exotic compact objects with spin
χ ≲ 0.7 (χ≲0.9) should have an absorption coefficient of at least 0.3% (6%) to remain linearly stable, and that an absorption coefficient of at least ≈60% would quench the instability for any spin. We also show that—in the static limit—the scalar, electromagnetic, and gravitatonal perturbations of the Kerr metric are related to one another through Darboux transformations. Finally, correcting previous results, we give the transformations that bring the Teukolsky equation in a form described by a real potential also in the gravitational case
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Constraining the mass of dark photons and axion-like particles through black-hole superradiance
Geodetic precession and strong gravitational lensing in the dynamical Chern-Simons modified gravity
We have investigated the geodetic precession and the strong gravitational
lensing in the slowly-rotating black hole in the dynamical Chern-Simons
modified gravity theory. We present the formulas of the orbital period and
the geodetic precession angle for the timelike particles in the
circular orbits around the black hole, which shows that the change of the
geodetic precession angle with the Chern-Simons coupling parameter is
converse to the change of the orbital period with for fixed . We also
discuss the effects of the Chern-Simons coupling parameter on the strong
gravitational lensing when the light rays pass close to the black hole and
obtain that for the stronger Chern-Simons coupling the prograde photons may be
captured more easily, and conversely, the retrograde photons is harder to be
captured in the slowly-rotating black hole in the dynamical Chern-Simons
modified gravity. Supposing that the gravitational field of the supermassive
central object of the Galaxy can be described by this metric, we estimated the
numerical values of the main observables for gravitational lensing in the
strong field limit.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, more clarifications and references added,
accepted for publication in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Instability of hyper-compact Kerr-like objects
Viable alternatives to astrophysical black holes include hyper-compact
objects without horizon, such as gravastars, boson stars, wormholes and
superspinars. The authors have recently shown that typical rapidly-spinning
gravastars and boson stars develop a strong instability. That analysis is
extended in this paper to a wide class of horizonless objects with approximate
Kerr-like geometry. A detailed investigation of wormholes and superspinars is
presented, using plausible models and mirror boundary conditions at the
surface. Like gravastars and boson stars, these objects are unstable with very
short instability timescales. This result strengthens previous conclusions that
observed hyper-compact astrophysical objects with large rotation are likely to
be black holes.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures. To be published in CQ
Generic bounds on dipolar gravitational radiation from inspiralling compact binaries
Various alternative theories of gravity predict dipolar gravitational
radiation in addition to quadrupolar radiation. We show that gravitational wave
(GW) observations of inspiralling compact binaries can put interesting
constraints on the strengths of the dipole modes of GW polarizations. We put
forward a physically motivated gravitational waveform for dipole modes, in the
Fourier domain, in terms of two parameters: one which captures the relative
amplitude of the dipole mode with respect to the quadrupole mode () and
the other a dipole term in the phase (). We then use this two parameter
representation to discuss typical bounds on their values using GW measurements.
We obtain the expected bounds on the amplitude parameter and the phase
parameter for Advanced LIGO (AdvLIGO) and Einstein Telescope (ET) noise
power spectral densities using Fisher information matrix. AdvLIGO and ET may at
best bound to an accuracy of and and
to an accuracy of and respectively.Comment: Matches with the published versio
The stochastic gravitational-wave background in the absence of horizons
Gravitational-wave astronomy has the potential to explore one of the deepest and most puzzling aspects of Einstein's theory: the existence of black holes. A plethora of ultracompact, horizonless objects have been proposed to arise in models inspired by quantum gravity. These objects may solve Hawking's information-loss paradox and the singularity problem associated with black holes, while mimicking almost all of their classical properties. They are, however, generically unstable on relatively short timescales. Here, we show that this 'ergoregion instability' leads to a strong stochastic background of gravitational waves, at a level detectable by current and future gravitational-wave detectors. The absence of such background in the first observation run of Advanced LIGO already imposes the most stringent limits to date on black-hole alternatives, showing that certain models of 'quantum-dressed' stellar black holes can be at most a small percentage of the total population. The future LISA mission will allow for similar constraints on supermassive black-hole mimickers
Environmental effects for gravitational-wave astrophysics
The upcoming detection of gravitational waves by terrestrial interferometers will usher in the era of gravitational-wave astronomy. This will be particularly true when space-based detectors will come of age and measure the mass and spin of massive black holes with exquisite precision and up to very high redshifts, thus allowing for better understanding of the symbiotic evolution of black holes with galaxies, and for high-precision tests of General Relativity in strong-field, highly dynamical regimes. Such ambitious goals require that astrophysical environmental pollution of gravitational-wave signals be constrained to negligible levels, so that neither detection nor estimation of the source parameters are significantly affected. Here, we consider the main sources for space-based detectors the inspiral, merger and ringdown of massive black-hole binaries and extreme mass-ratio inspirals - and account for various effects on their gravitational waveforms, including electromagnetic fields, cosmological evolution, accretion disks, dark matter, "firewalls" and possible deviations from General Relativity. We discover that the black-hole quasinormal modes are sharply different in the presence of matter, but the ringdown signal observed by interferometers is typically unaffected. The effect of accretion disks and dark matter depends critically OH their geometry and density profile, but is negligible for most sources, except for few special extreme mass-ratio inspirals. Electromagnetic fields and cosmological effects are always negligible. We finally explore the implications of our findings for proposed tests of General Relativity with gravitational waves, and conclude that environmental effects will not prevent the development of precision gravitational-wave astronomy
Classes of Exact Solutions to the Teukolsky Master Equation
The Teukolsky Master Equation is the basic tool for study of perturbations of
the Kerr metric in linear approximation. It admits separation of variables,
thus yielding the Teukolsky Radial Equation and the Teukolsky Angular Equation.
We present here a unified description of all classes of exact solutions to
these equations in terms of the confluent Heun functions. Large classes of new
exact solutions are found and classified with respect to their characteristic
properties. Special attention is paid to the polynomial solutions which are
singular ones and introduce collimated one-way-running waves. It is shown that
a proper linear combination of such solutions can present bounded
one-way-running waves. This type of waves may be suitable as models of the
observed astrophysical jets.Comment: 27 pages, LaTeX file, no figures. Final versio
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