Litcius/Paper detail

Gravitational wave signatures of ultralight vector bosons from black hole superradiance

Nils Siemonsen, William E. East

2020Physical review. D/Physical review. D.106 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the presence of an ultralight bosonic field, spinning black holes are unstable to superradiance. The rotational energy of the black hole is converted into a nonaxisymmetric, oscillating boson cloud which dissipates through the emission of nearly monochromatic gravitational radiation. Thus, gravitational wave observations by ground- or space-based detectors can be used to probe the existence of dark particles weakly coupled to the Standard Model. In this work, we focus on massive vector bosons, which grow much faster through superradiance, and produce significantly stronger gravitational waves compared to the scalar case. We use techniques from black hole perturbation theory to compute the relativistically correct gravitational wave signal across the parameter space of different boson masses and black hole masses and spins. This fills in a gap in the literature between flatspace approximations, which underestimate the gravitational wave amplitude in the nonrelativistic limit and overestimate it in the relativistic regime, and time-domain calculations, which have only covered a limited part of the parameter space. We also identify parameter ranges where overtone superradiantly unstable modes will grow faster than the lower-frequency fundamental modes. Such cases will produce a distinct gravitational wave signal due to the beating of the simultaneously populated modes, which we compute.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsSuperradianceGravitational waveBosonGravitational-wave observatoryBlack hole (networking)Quantum electrodynamicsGravitational redshiftGravitational fieldMassless particleGravitational energyRotating black holeGravitationClassical mechanicsQuantum mechanicsAngular momentumRouting (electronic design automation)LaserComputer scienceComputer networkRouting protocolLink-state routing protocolPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchAstrophysics and Cosmic PhenomenaCosmology and Gravitation Theories