Testing general relativity via direct measurement of black hole kicks
ORAL
Abstract
Asymmetric emission of gravitational waves during a compact binary coalescence results in the loss of linear momentum and a corresponding "kick" or recoil on the binary's center of mass. This leads to a direction-dependent Doppler shift of the ringdown gravitational waveform. We quantify the measurability of the kick imparted to the remnant black hole in a binary black hole merger. Future ground- and space-based gravitational-wave detectors will measure this effect to within ~2% to ~30% for a subset of their expected observed sources. Certain binary configurations in the LISA band may allow a sub-percent-level measurement of this effect. This direct measurement of black hole kicks can also facilitate a novel test of general relativity based on linear momentum balance. We formulate this kick consistency test via measurement of a null variable that quantifies the difference between the inferred kick (using numerical relativity) and that observed via the Doppler-shifted ringdown signal. This null variable can be constrained (at 90% confidence) to ~10% to 30% with Cosmic Explorer and to ~3% to 12% with LISA.
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Publication: Phys. Rev. D 110, 084041 (2024) [arXiv: 2308.08319]
Presenters
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Marc Favata
Montclair State University
Authors
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Marc Favata
Montclair State University
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Parthapratim Mahapatra
Cardiff University
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K.G. Arun
Chennai Mathematical Institute