Litcius/Paper detail

Model independent tests of the Kerr bound with extreme mass ratio inspirals

Gabriel Andres Piovano, Andrea Maselli, Paolo Pani

2020Physics Letters B28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An outstanding prediction of general relativity is the fact that the angular momentum S of an isolated black hole with mass μ is limited by the Kerr bound, S≤Gμ2/c. Testing this cornerstone is challenging due to the difficulty in modeling spinning compact objects that violate this bound. We argue that precise, model-independent tests can be achieved by measuring gravitational waves from an extreme mass ratio inspiral around a supermassive object, one of the main targets of the future LISA mission. In the extreme mass ratio limit, the dynamics of the small compact object depends only on its multipole moments, which are free parameters. At variance with the comparable-mass case, accurate waveforms are valid also when the spin of the small object greatly exceeds the Kerr bound. By computing the orbital dephasing and the gravitational-wave signal emitted by a spinning point particle in circular, nonprecessing, equatorial motion around a Kerr black hole, we estimate that LISA will be able to measure the spin of the small compact object at the level of 10%. Together with mass measurements, this will allow for theory-agnostic, unprecedented constraints on string-theory inspired objects such as “superspinars”, almost in their entire parameter space.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsMass ratioMultipole expansionAngular momentumGravitational waveBlack hole (networking)General relativitySpin (aerodynamics)Quantum mechanicsClassical mechanicsAstrophysicsComputer networkRouting protocolLink-state routing protocolThermodynamicsRouting (electronic design automation)Computer sciencePulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchAstrophysical Phenomena and ObservationsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics