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News from Horizons in Binary Black Hole Mergers

Vaishak Prasad, A. Gupta, S. Bose, B. Krishnan, Erik Schnetter

2020Physical Review Letters36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In a binary black hole merger, it is known that the inspiral portion of the waveform corresponds to two distinct horizons orbiting each other and that the merger and ringdown signals correspond to the final horizon being formed and settling down to equilibrium. However, we still lack a detailed understanding of the relation between the horizon geometry in these three regimes and the observed waveform. Here we show that the well-known inspiral chirp waveform has a clear counterpart on black hole horizons, namely, the shear of the outgoing null rays at the horizon. We demonstrate that the shear behaves very much like a compact binary coalescence waveform with increasing frequency and amplitude. Furthermore, the parameters of the system estimated from the horizon agree with those estimated from the waveform. This implies that even though black hole horizons are causally disconnected from us, assuming general relativity to be true, we can potentially infer some of their detailed properties from gravitational wave observations.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsBinary black holeWaveformGravitational waveHorizonBlack hole (networking)AmplitudeNumerical relativityEvent horizonBinary numberChirpAstrophysicsClassical mechanicsQuantum mechanicsAstronomyMathematicsComputer scienceComputer networkVoltageRouting protocolLink-state routing protocolArithmeticRouting (electronic design automation)LaserPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
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