论文标题
一种新型的振幅振幅一致性测试
A novel ringdown amplitude-phase consistency test
论文作者
论文摘要
在二进制黑洞合并期间发出的环形信号可以建模为在合并阶段激发的残留黑洞的特征阻尼模式的线性叠加。虽然检查测得的频率和阻尼时间与通过一般相对性(GR)预测的KERR BH光谱的一致性是重力测试的基石,但测量的激发振幅和相位的一致性在很大程度上尚未探索。对于不必要的准圆形二进制黑洞合并,我们发现GR在模式幅度比和相位差的空间中预测了一个狭窄的区域,与二进制组件的自旋无关。 % 使用这种意外的结果,我们开发了一个新的强场重力测试,该测试要求测得的幅度和不同的环阵模式的阶段应位于GR预测的狭窄区域内。我们将其称为\ emph {振幅 - 相位一致性测试},并引入了使用Ringdown信号中信息执行它的过程。最后,我们使用Capano等人推断的多模式环数参数将此测试应用于GW190521事件。 (2021)\ cite {capano:2021etf}。尽管此事件的RINGDOWN测量误差很大,但我们表明GW190521与振幅相位一致性测试一致。我们的测试特别适合在不久的将来适应多个大声的敲击检测,并且可以与标准的黑孔光谱互补用作修饰的重力,除黑孔,二进制预动力和偏心率以外的其他紧凑型物体。
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, quasi-circular 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 \emph{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. (2021) \cite{Capano:2021etf}. 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.