Numerical relativity simulations of triple black hole systems reveal redshift effects and gravitational lensing in ringdown signals from head-on mergers, with no additional black hole formation from amplified waves.
Testing general relativity using binary extreme-mass-ratio inspirals
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
It is known that massive black holes (MBHs) of $10^{5-7}\,M_\odot$ could capture small compact objects to form extreme-mass-ratio inspirals (EMRIs). Such systems emit gravitational waves (GWs) in the band of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) and are ideal probes of the space-time geometry of MBHs. Recently, we have shown that MBHs could also capture stellar-mass binary black holes (about $10\,M_\odot$) to form binary-EMRIs (b-EMRIs) and, interestingly, a large fraction of the binaries coalesce due to the tidal perturbation by the MBHs. Here we further show that the coalescence could be detected by LISA as glitches in EMRI signals. We propose an experiment to use the multi-band ($10^2$ and $10^{-3}$ Hz) glitch signals to test gravity theories. Our simulations suggest that the experiment could measure the mass and linear momentum lost via GW radiation, as well as constrain the mass of gravitons, to a precision that is one order of magnitude better than the current limit.
verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Hydrodynamic drag makes BBH waveforms resemble higher-mass vacuum sources, biasing matched-filter chirp-mass estimates upward for LISA sources.
citing papers explorer
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The third wheel: ringdown and lensing of triple systems
Numerical relativity simulations of triple black hole systems reveal redshift effects and gravitational lensing in ringdown signals from head-on mergers, with no additional black hole formation from amplified waves.
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Retrieving the True Masses of Gravitational-wave Sources
Hydrodynamic drag makes BBH waveforms resemble higher-mass vacuum sources, biasing matched-filter chirp-mass estimates upward for LISA sources.