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Post-merger chirps from binary black holes as probes of the final black-hole horizon

Physics

Post-merger chirps from binary black holes as probes of the final black-hole horizon

J. C. Bustillo, C. Evans, et al.

Explore the fascinating dynamics of black hole mergers as researchers uncover a link between gravitational wave features and the geometry of the final black hole's horizon. This groundbreaking study by Juan Calderon Bustillo and colleagues reveals how cusp-like horizon defects resonate with observable chirps in post-merger gravitational waves, leveraging the heightened sensitivity of future observatories like LIGO and Virgo.

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Playback language: English
Abstract
The merger of a binary black hole creates a highly distorted final black hole. The gravitational radiation emitted during this relaxation offers a unique opportunity to probe extreme gravity and its connection to black hole horizon dynamics. Using numerical relativity simulations, the authors demonstrate a correlation between observable features in gravitational waves and geometrical properties of the final black hole's dynamical apparent horizon. Specifically, they show how the line-of-sight passage of a 'cusp'-like defect on the horizon correlates with 'chirp'-like frequency peaks in the post-merger gravitational waves. These post-merger chirps are expected to be observable with increased sensitivity of LIGO, Virgo, LISA, and the Einstein Telescope.
Publisher
Communications Physics
Published On
Oct 08, 2020
Authors
Juan Calderon Bustillo, Christopher Evans, James A. Clark, Grace Kim, Pablo Laguna, Deirdre Shoemaker
Tags
black holes
gravitational waves
numerical relativity
horizon dynamics
LIGO
chirp signals
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