7 research outputs found
Follow-up signals from superradiant instabilities of black hole merger remnants
Superradiant instabilities can trigger the formation of bosonic clouds around
rotating black holes. If the bosonic field growth is sufficiently fast, these
clouds could form shortly after a binary black hole merger. Such clouds are
continuous sources of gravitational waves whose detection (or lack thereof) can
probe the existence of ultralight bosons (such as axion-like particles) and
their properties. Motivated by the binary black hole mergers seen by Advanced
LIGO so far, we investigate in detail the parameter space that can be probed
with continuous gravitational wave signals from ultralight scalar field clouds
around black hole merger remnants with particular focus on future ground-based
detectors (A+, Voyager and Cosmic Explorer). We also study the impact that the
confusion noise from a putative stochastic gravitational-wave background from
unresolved sources would have on such searches and we estimate, under different
astrophysical priors, the number of binary black-hole merger events that could
lead to an observable post-merger signal. Under our most optimistic
assumptions, Cosmic Explorer could detect dozens of post-merger signals.Comment: v1:10 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables; v2: matches published versio
Overspinning a nearly extreme black hole and the Weak Cosmic Censorship conjecture
We revisit here the recent proposal for overspinning a nearly extreme black
hole by means of a quantum tunneling process. We show that electrically neutral
massless fermions evade possible back reactions effects related to
superradiance, confirming the view that it would be indeed possible to form a
naked singularity due to quantum effects.Comment: 4 pages. Final version to appear in PRD as a Rapid Communicatio
Black hole binaries: ergoregions, photon surfaces, wave scattering, and quasinormal modes
Closed photon orbits around isolated black holes are related to important
aspects of black hole physics, such as strong lensing, absorption cross section
of null particles and the way that black holes relax through quasinormal
ringing. When two black holes are present -- such as during the inspiral and
merger events of interest for gravitational-wave detectors -- the concept of
closed photon orbits still exists, but its properties are basically unknown.
With these applications in mind, we study here the closed photon orbits of two
different static black hole binaries. The first one is the Majumdar-Papapetrou
geometry describing two extremal, charged black holes in equilibrium, while the
second one is the double sink solution of fluid dynamics, which describes (in a
curved-spacetime language) two "dumb" holes. For the latter solution, we also
characterize its dynamical response to external perturbations, and study how it
relates to the photon orbits. In addition, we compute the ergoregion of such
spacetime and show that it does not coincide with the event horizon.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures. v3: minor edits, to appear in Physical Review
Rotating black holes in a draining bathtub: superradiant scattering of gravity waves
In a draining rotating fluid flow background, surface perturbations behave as a scalar field on a rotating effective black hole spacetime. We propose a new model for the background flow which takes into account the varying depth of the water. Numerical integration of the associated Klein-Gordon equation using accessible experimental parameters shows that gravity waves in an appropriate frequency range are amplified through the mechanism of superradiance. Our numerical results suggest that the observation of this phenomenon in a common fluid mechanical system is within experimental reach. Unlike the case of wave scattering around Kerr black holes, which depends only on one dimensionless background parameter (the ratio a/M between the specific angular momentum and the mass of the black hole), our system depends on two dimensionless background parameters, namely the normalized angular velocity and surface gravity at the effective black hole horizon
Scattering cross section and stability of global monopoles
FAPESP - FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULOWe study the scattering of scalar waves propagating on the global monopole background. Since the scalar wave operator in this topological defect is not essentially self-adjoint, its solutions are not uniquely determined until a boundary condition at the origin is specified. As we show, this boundary condition manifests itself in the differential cross section and can be inferred by measuring the amplitude of the backscattered wave. We further demonstrate that whether or not the spacetime is stable under scalar perturbations also depends on the chosen boundary condition. In particular, we identify a class of such boundary conditions that significantly affects the differential cross section without introducing an instability.9610FAPESP - FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULOFAPESP - FUNDAÇÃO DE AMPARO À PESQUISA DO ESTADO DE SÃO PAULO2013/09357-92016/08862-02016/07057-
Detecting rotational superradiance in fluid laboratories
Rotational superradiance was predicted theoretically decades ago, and is chiefly responsible for a number of important effects and phenomenology in black-hole physics. However, rotational superradiance has never been observed experimentally. Here, with the aim of probing superradiance in the lab, we investigate the behavior of sound and surface waves in fluids resting in a circular basin at the center of which a rotating cylinder is placed. We show that with a suitable choice for the material of the cylinder, surface and sound waves are amplified. Two types of instabilities are studied: one sets in whenever superradiant modes are confined near the rotating cylinder and the other, which does not rely on confinement, corresponds to a local excitation of the cylinder. Our findings are experimentally testable in existing fluid laboratories and, hence, offer experimental exploration and comparison of dynamical instabilities arising from rapidly rotating boundary layers in astrophysical as well as in fluid dynamical systems