Recognition: 3 theorem links
· Lean TheoremTests of General Relativity with GWTC-3
Pith reviewed 2026-05-12 02:34 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Analysis of 15 high-confidence gravitational wave events from GWTC-3 finds all tested quantities consistent with general relativity.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Using the 15 confident signals from GWTC-3, the collaboration performs a suite of tests of general relativity in the dynamical strong-field regime. Residual power after subtracting best-fit waveforms is consistent with noise. All post-Newtonian deformation coefficients match GR values. Spin-induced quadrupole moments of binary black hole components agree with those of Kerr black holes. No evidence appears for gravitational wave dispersion, non-GR polarization modes, or post-merger echoes. The graviton mass bound improves to 2.42 × 10^{-23} eV/c² at 90% credibility. Final mass and spin inferred from pre-merger and post-merger waveform segments are consistent, as are the quasi-normal mode ring
What carries the argument
The set of consistency tests applied to individual and combined gravitational wave signals, including residual power analysis after GR waveform subtraction, post-Newtonian coefficient estimation, polarization mode decomposition, and quasi-normal mode frequency and damping time checks.
If this is right
- The data support continued use of GR-based waveform models for parameter estimation in future detections.
- Population-level constraints from the full catalog tighten bounds on possible deviations from GR.
- Remnant black hole properties inferred from ringdown match those predicted by GR merger calculations.
- Absence of dispersion or echoes places limits on modifications to gravitational wave propagation.
- Consistency across independent tests reduces the likelihood that hidden systematics are concealing new physics.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Continued null results would increase confidence that any quantum-gravity corrections remain undetectable at current merger energies.
- The same analysis framework could be applied to future events with higher signal-to-noise ratios to probe stronger-field regimes.
- If a deviation appears in a single loud event, it would immediately motivate targeted follow-up searches in the existing catalog.
- The updated graviton mass limit can be combined with other astrophysical or cosmological bounds for a joint constraint.
Load-bearing premise
The 15 selected events are accurately described by the general relativity waveform models used for subtraction and parameter estimation, without unmodeled systematics in detector noise or calibration that could mimic or mask deviations.
What would settle it
Observation of statistically significant residual power after subtracting the best-fit GR waveform from any event, or a post-Newtonian coefficient that deviates from its GR value by more than the reported uncertainty.
read the original abstract
The ever-increasing number of detections of gravitational waves (GWs) from compact binaries by the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo detectors allows us to perform ever-more sensitive tests of general relativity (GR) in the dynamical and strong-field regime of gravity. We perform a suite of tests of GR using the compact binary signals observed during the second half of the third observing run of those detectors. We restrict our analysis to the 15 confident signals that have false alarm rates $\leq 10^{-3}\, {\rm yr}^{-1}$. In addition to signals consistent with binary black hole (BH) mergers, the new events include GW200115_042309, a signal consistent with a neutron star--BH merger. We find the residual power, after subtracting the best fit waveform from the data for each event, to be consistent with the detector noise. Additionally, we find all the post-Newtonian deformation coefficients to be consistent with the predictions from GR, with an improvement by a factor of ~2 in the -1PN parameter. We also find that the spin-induced quadrupole moments of the binary BH constituents are consistent with those of Kerr BHs in GR. We find no evidence for dispersion of GWs, non-GR modes of polarization, or post-merger echoes in the events that were analyzed. We update the bound on the mass of the graviton, at 90% credibility, to $m_g \leq 2.42 \times 10^{-23} \mathrm{eV}/c^2$. The final mass and final spin as inferred from the pre-merger and post-merger parts of the waveform are consistent with each other. The studies of the properties of the remnant BHs, including deviations of the quasi-normal mode frequencies and damping times, show consistency with the predictions of GR. In addition to considering signals individually, we also combine results from the catalog of GW signals to calculate more precise population constraints. We find no evidence in support of physics beyond GR.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper performs a suite of tests of general relativity on the 15 confident gravitational-wave events (FAR ≤ 10^{-3} yr^{-1}) from the second half of the third LIGO-Virgo observing run, including binary black hole mergers and the neutron star-black hole candidate GW200115_042309. Tests cover residual power after GR waveform subtraction, post-Newtonian deformation coefficients (improved -1PN constraint), spin-induced quadrupole moments, gravitational-wave dispersion, non-GR polarizations, post-merger echoes, graviton mass bound (updated to m_g ≤ 2.42 × 10^{-23} eV/c² at 90% credibility), consistency of pre- and post-merger remnant properties, and quasi-normal mode deviations for remnants. Individual and population-combined results show consistency with GR, with the conclusion of no evidence for physics beyond GR.
Significance. If the results hold, this represents a substantial extension of prior GWTC-1/GWTC-2 analyses to a larger catalog with improved sensitivity, delivering tighter bounds on multiple deviation parameters and the graviton mass while incorporating a new event class. Strengths include the use of public events, standard LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA pipelines for reproducibility, and explicit combination of results for population constraints. The work reinforces GR in the strong-field dynamical regime without introducing new free parameters or ad-hoc entities.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract and sections on residual tests and PN coefficients] The central claim of consistency with GR and no evidence for beyond-GR physics rests on the assumption that the selected GR waveform models (used for matched filtering, subtraction, and parameter estimation) accurately describe the 15 events without unmodeled systematics in noise or calibration that could bias residuals or deviation parameters. While standard, the manuscript should explicitly quantify the potential impact of such systematics on the reported bounds (e.g., via injection studies or alternative waveform families) in the sections describing the residual tests and PN coefficient constraints, as this is load-bearing for interpreting the null results.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The abstract states an improvement by a factor of ~2 in the -1PN parameter but does not cite the specific previous bound or the exact new constraint value; the main text should provide this comparison with a reference to prior work for clarity.
- [Figures and tables on combined constraints] Figure captions and tables summarizing individual event results should include explicit statements on the number of events contributing to each combined constraint to aid reader interpretation.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their positive assessment of our work and for the constructive major comment. We address the point below and will revise the manuscript accordingly to strengthen the interpretation of our null results.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract and sections on residual tests and PN coefficients] The central claim of consistency with GR and no evidence for beyond-GR physics rests on the assumption that the selected GR waveform models (used for matched filtering, subtraction, and parameter estimation) accurately describe the 15 events without unmodeled systematics in noise or calibration that could bias residuals or deviation parameters. While standard, the manuscript should explicitly quantify the potential impact of such systematics on the reported bounds (e.g., via injection studies or alternative waveform families) in the sections describing the residual tests and PN coefficient constraints, as this is load-bearing for interpreting the null results.
Authors: We agree that explicitly addressing the potential impact of waveform systematics is important for robust interpretation of the null results. The primary waveform models employed (IMRPhenomXPHM for most events and SEOBNRv4PHM for cross-checks) are the standard choices validated extensively by the LVK collaboration for the mass and spin ranges of GWTC-3 events. However, to directly respond to this comment, the revised manuscript will include additional text in the residual tests and PN coefficient sections. This will reference existing injection studies from GWTC-2/3 analyses demonstrating that unmodeled systematics do not produce spurious deviations at the level of our reported bounds, and we will add a brief comparison using an alternative waveform family (e.g., NRSur7dq4) for a representative subset of events to confirm that the -1PN constraint and residual consistency remain unchanged within statistical uncertainties. These additions will be concise and will not alter the main conclusions. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity: empirical GR deviation tests on GWTC-3 data are data-driven fits, not self-referential
full rationale
The paper conducts a suite of empirical tests on 15 GW events by introducing free deviation parameters (e.g., post-Newtonian coefficients, graviton mass, polarization modes, QNM deviations) into waveform models and fitting them directly to the strain data. Results are reported as consistency checks where fitted values match GR predictions within uncertainties; this is a standard statistical test outcome, not a quantity defined by construction from the GR templates or prior fits. Residual tests subtract best-fit waveforms and compare to noise, which is falsifiable by the data. No steps reduce a claimed prediction to an input by definition, and self-citations to prior LIGO papers supply context or updated bounds without serving as the sole justification for the new GWTC-3 conclusions. The analysis remains self-contained against external benchmarks (detector noise models, independent waveform approximants).
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption GR waveform models accurately describe the signals from compact binary coalescences in the strong-field regime
- domain assumption Detector noise is stationary and well-characterized by the noise model used in the analysis
Lean theorems connected to this paper
-
IndisputableMonolith.Cost.FunctionalEquationwashburn_uniqueness_aczel echoes?
echoesECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.
We find no evidence in support of physics beyond GR.
-
IndisputableMonolith.Foundation.DAlembert.Inevitabilitybilinear_family_forced echoes?
echoesECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.
We find all the post-Newtonian deformation coefficients to be consistent with the predictions from GR
What do these tags mean?
- matches
- The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
- supports
- The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
- extends
- The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
- uses
- The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
- contradicts
- The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
- unclear
- Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.
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- The Science of the Einstein Telescope
Reference graph
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