"Towards Tests of General Relativity with Gravitational Waves from Precessing Binaries"Nicholas Loutrel , University of Milano-Bicocca) [Host: Kent Yagi]
ABSTRACT:
Compact objects possessing complicated multipole structure will generally cause precession of the orbital plane when present in a binary system. The most common example of this within general relativity is so-called spin precession, which is caused when the spin angular momentum of the compact object couple to each other, as well as the orbital angular momentum. The precession of the latter of these induces modulations in both the frequency and amplitude of the observed gravitational wave emission of the binary, effects which play a crucial role in parameter estimation. However, if general relativity is not the correct theory of gravity at astrophysical scales and must be modified, or the compact objects have significantly more complicated multipole structure beyond that of a simple pole-dipole, the precession dynamics of the binary will also be modified from that of standard spin precession. Such modifications will necessarily be imprinted in the waveform generated by the precessing binary, opening the door to performing tests of general relativity within the precessing sector of binary dynamics. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, January 22, 2024 12:30 PM , Room Zoom Note special time. Note special room. Join Zoom Meeting https://virginia.zoom.us/j/96623644155?pwd=MzFGMnEvTWwrVDU5L3JRdnVqOVJnUT09
Meeting ID: 966 2364 4155 Passcode: 813439 |
Available
|
Gravity Seminar Monday, February 5, 2024 1:30 PM , Room TBA Note special room. |
Available
|
Gravity Seminar Monday, February 19, 2024 1:30 PM , Room TBA Note special room. |
ABSTRACT:
Neutron stars are some of the most compact objects in the universe, second only to black holes. Their interior composition remains a mystery, but studies of neutron stars and pulsars can allow scientists to probe the dense nuclear regions within. These investigations often lead to bounds on a neutron star mass, which can be compared with a given equation of state to provide the physical characteristics of a star. In this talk, I'll speak about some work following up one of the most massive neutron stars ever measured, J0348+0432, and provide an update into the mass estimates. This work was carried out with the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) telescope as well as archival data provided by the Arecibo Observatory and the Green Bank Telescope. We have found that new estimates place a mass considerably lower than the original estimate likely due to a mis-modeling of the white dwarf companion mass. A discussion of how this happened as well as the consequences of this new revelation will also be discussed. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, March 11, 2024 1:30 PM Physics, Room 323 Note special room. |
"Gravitational-wave signatures of the dark-matter environments around black hole binaries"Benjamin Wade , UVA-Physics [Host: David Nichols]
ABSTRACT:
Massive black holes can grow in the presence of dark-matter environments and form dark-matter spikes with large densities. When a massive black hole within a dark-matter environment is part of an inspiral with a second compact object, the environmental effects will be imprinted on the system's dynamics. Past work studying these systems has demonstrated that gravitational effects like dynamical friction and accretion effects from the dark-matter distribution can have measurable impacts on the binary inspiral rate. The emitted gravitational waves will be affected in turn; given that they will be in the observable band for upcoming space-based detectors like LISA, the dynamics of dark matter on these scales can be understood precisely. In this talk, I discuss progress in evolving these systems on three fronts. First, I will overview a generalization of dynamical friction suitable for spherical systems, and its applications to inspirals. Second, I will present refinements on the effects of dark-matter accretion in a self-consistent framework. Finally, I will discuss the impacts of the formation history of the system on both the resulting dark-matter distribution and the gravitational waveform we would detect from such a binary. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, March 18, 2024 1:30 PM Physics, Room 031 Note special room. |
"Gravitational-waves: from black holes to the cosmos"Maximiliano Isi , Flatiron Institute [Host: Sayantani Datta]
ABSTRACT:
With the LIGO-Virgo detectors currently undergoing their 4th observing round, gravitational-wave astronomy has matured into a fast-developing field with broad implications for astrophysics, nuclear physics, gravity and cosmology. In this talk, I will focus on recent developments in probing the physics of black holes and their mergers with gravitational waves. This includes measurements of black hole spins and merger kicks, their use as cosmological probes, and the spectroscopic study of ringing black holes. I will outline some of the theoretical and observational questions driving this field: how do black holes form? Can we leverage them as probes of new fundamental fields, dark matter or cosmic expansion? I will conclude by arguing that we are at the cusp of observationally tackling these and many other fascinating questions as we enter the era of precision gravitational-wave science, with current and future observatories in space and on the ground. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, March 25, 2024 1:30 PM Physics, Room 323 Note special room. |
"Gravitational and Electromagnetic Love Numbers of Magnetar Systems: an Effective Field Theory Approach"Siddarth Ajith , University of Virginia [Host: Kent Yagi]
ABSTRACT:
With the advent of gravitational wave astronomy, our view of the universe has expanded to new and exciting frontiers. One especially promising avenue to explore in fundamental physics through gravitational waves is probing dense nuclear matter contained in neutron stars; observations of gravitational waves sourced by these extremely compact objects allow one to study matter in regimes that we could never replicate on Earth. Compact stars contain finite-size effects, such as tidal deformations, which leave imprints on the gravitational wave signal that describe the internal stellar structure, so studying such effects is crucial to expanding our understanding of matter at the most extreme scales. In this seminar, I shall describe how tidal fields in magnetar systems (neutron stars with incredibly strong magnetic fields) can lead to an interesting interplay between tidal fields and magnetic fields. This interaction is encapsulated in how the tidal field changes the magnetic properties of the star and, in turn, in how the magnetic field of the star changes its tidal deformability properties. I shall also outline an effective field theory formalism to study tidal fields alongside the conventional general relativity formalism. This effective field theory approach proves to be a natural arena to identify features of this system which can be difficult to study with the usual spacetime geometric approach alone. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, April 1, 2024 1:30 PM Zoom and in-person, Room 323, JBL Note special room. Join Zoom Meeting |
Available
|
Gravity Seminar Monday, April 8, 2024 1:30 PM , Room TBA Note special room. |
"Probing new physics from tests of gravity and pulsar kick"Tanmay Poddar , Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare [Host: Kent Yagi]
ABSTRACT:
Ultralight axion-like particles, an excellent candidate for dark matter, can mediate a long-range macroscopic force with monopole-monopole and monopole-dipole interactions between the planets and the Sun. The presence of these long-range potentials affects the perihelion precession of planets, gravitational light bending and Shapiro time delay. From the precision studies of these tests of gravity, we obtain new constraints on the macroscopic forces. The bound is three orders of magnitude stronger than the Eot-Wash experiment. The ultralight scalar and vector dark matter also influence active-sterile neutrino oscillation in the supernova core which is one of the solutions to explain the longstanding problem of the pulsar kick. The signal from the asymmetric emission of neutrinos in the presence of an ultralight dark matter background can be probed by future gravitational wave detectors. The effects of ultralight dark matter in explaining pulsar kick are equivalent to the Lorentz and CPT invariance violation in the theory and we obtain an equivalent bounds on these parameters. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, April 15, 2024 1:00 PM Online, Room Zoom Note special time. Note special room. Join Zoom Meeting: Meeting ID: 939 1525 6097 |
"Taming eccentricity in binary black hole mergers"Tousif Islam , Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics, University of California Santa Barbara [Host: Kent Yagi]
ABSTRACT:
Accurate characterization of gravitational wave signals from binary black hole (BBH) mergers require efficient models for the waveform and remnant quantities. While we have accurate models for quasi-circular BBH mergers, modelling eccentric binaries is still in its nascent stage. Using both numerical relativity (NR) and black hole perturbation theory (BHPT), we study the phenomenology of eccentric BBH waveforms. We present convincing evidence that the waveform phenomenology in eccentric BBH mergers is significantly simpler than previously thought. We find that the eccentric modulations in the amplitudes and frequencies in different spherical harmonic modes are all related and can be modeled using a single time series modulation. Using this universal eccentric modulation, we provide a model named gwNRHME to seamlessly convert a multi-modal (i.e with several spherical harmonic modes) quasi-circular waveform into multi-modal eccentric waveform if the quadrupolar eccentric waveform is known. This reduces the modelling complexity of eccentric BBH mergers drastically as we now have to model only a single eccentric modulation time-series instead of modelling the effect of eccentricity in all modes. We use gwNRHME to include eccentricity in current NR surrogate waveform models for quasi-circular mergers. Additionally, we discuss efforts in building dedicated surrogate models for eccentric BBH mergers using both NR and BHPT. |
Gravity Seminar Monday, April 22, 2024 1:30 PM Physics, Room 031 Note special room. |
Available
|
Gravity Seminar Thursday, April 25, 2024 1:30 PM , Room TBA Note special date. Note special room. |
To add a speaker, send an email to dn2ep@Virginia.EDU Include the seminar type (e.g. Gravity Seminars), date, name of the speaker, title of talk, and an abstract (if available). [Please send a copy of the email to phys-speakers@Virginia.EDU.]