TY - JOUR
T1 - Tests of general relativity in the nonlinear regime
T2 - A parametrized plunge-merger-ringdown gravitational waveform model
AU - Maggio, Elisa
AU - Silva, Hector O.
AU - Buonanno, Alessandra
AU - Ghosh, Abhirup
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 authors. Published by the American Physical Society. Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI. Open access publication funded by the Max Planck Society.
PY - 2023/7/15
Y1 - 2023/7/15
N2 - The plunge-merger stage of the binary-black hole coalescence, when the bodies' velocities reach a large fraction of the speed of light and the gravitational-wave luminosity peaks, provides a unique opportunity to probe gravity in the dynamical and nonlinear regime. How much do the predictions of general relativity differ from the ones in other theories of gravity for this stage of the binary evolution To address this question, we develop a parametrized waveform model, within the effective-one-body formalism, that allows for deviations from general relativity in the plunge-merger-ringdown stage. As first step, we focus on nonprecessing-spin, quasicircular black hole binaries. In comparison to previous works, for each gravitational wave mode, our model can modify, with respect to general-relativistic predictions, the instant at which the amplitude peaks, the instantaneous frequency at this time instant, and the value of the peak amplitude. We use this waveform model to explore several questions considering both synthetic-data injections and two gravitational wave signals. In particular, we find that deviations from the peak gravitational wave amplitude and instantaneous frequency can be constrained to about 20% with GW150914. Alarmingly, we find that GW200129_65458 shows a strong violation of general relativity. We interpret this result as a false violation, either due to waveform systematics (mismodeling of spin precession) or due to data-quality issues depending on one's interpretation of this event. This illustrates the use of parametrized waveform models as tools to investigate systematic errors in plain general relativity. The results with GW200129_65458 also vividly demonstrate the importance of waveform systematics and of glitch mitigation procedures when interpreting tests of general relativity with current gravitational wave observations.
AB - The plunge-merger stage of the binary-black hole coalescence, when the bodies' velocities reach a large fraction of the speed of light and the gravitational-wave luminosity peaks, provides a unique opportunity to probe gravity in the dynamical and nonlinear regime. How much do the predictions of general relativity differ from the ones in other theories of gravity for this stage of the binary evolution To address this question, we develop a parametrized waveform model, within the effective-one-body formalism, that allows for deviations from general relativity in the plunge-merger-ringdown stage. As first step, we focus on nonprecessing-spin, quasicircular black hole binaries. In comparison to previous works, for each gravitational wave mode, our model can modify, with respect to general-relativistic predictions, the instant at which the amplitude peaks, the instantaneous frequency at this time instant, and the value of the peak amplitude. We use this waveform model to explore several questions considering both synthetic-data injections and two gravitational wave signals. In particular, we find that deviations from the peak gravitational wave amplitude and instantaneous frequency can be constrained to about 20% with GW150914. Alarmingly, we find that GW200129_65458 shows a strong violation of general relativity. We interpret this result as a false violation, either due to waveform systematics (mismodeling of spin precession) or due to data-quality issues depending on one's interpretation of this event. This illustrates the use of parametrized waveform models as tools to investigate systematic errors in plain general relativity. The results with GW200129_65458 also vividly demonstrate the importance of waveform systematics and of glitch mitigation procedures when interpreting tests of general relativity with current gravitational wave observations.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.108.024043
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.108.024043
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85166756481
SN - 2470-0010
VL - 108
JO - Physical Review D
JF - Physical Review D
IS - 2
M1 - 024043
ER -