Black hole spectroscopy: Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates

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Black hole spectroscopy : Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates. / Baibhav, Vishal; Berti, Emanuele; Cardoso, Vitor; Khanna, Gaurav.

In: Physical Review D, Vol. 97, No. 4, 044048, 28.02.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Baibhav, V, Berti, E, Cardoso, V & Khanna, G 2018, 'Black hole spectroscopy: Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates', Physical Review D, vol. 97, no. 4, 044048. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.044048

APA

Baibhav, V., Berti, E., Cardoso, V., & Khanna, G. (2018). Black hole spectroscopy: Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates. Physical Review D, 97(4), [044048]. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.044048

Vancouver

Baibhav V, Berti E, Cardoso V, Khanna G. Black hole spectroscopy: Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates. Physical Review D. 2018 Feb 28;97(4). 044048. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.044048

Author

Baibhav, Vishal ; Berti, Emanuele ; Cardoso, Vitor ; Khanna, Gaurav. / Black hole spectroscopy : Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates. In: Physical Review D. 2018 ; Vol. 97, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{009c02f387584e388bb4f0ddcbc0a85f,
title = "Black hole spectroscopy: Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates",
abstract = "The relaxation of a distorted black hole to its final state provides important tests of general relativity within the reach of current and upcoming gravitational wave facilities. In black hole perturbation theory, this phase consists of a simple linear superposition of exponentially damped sinusoids (the quasinormal modes) and of a power-law tail. How many quasinormal modes are necessary to describe waveforms with a prescribed precision? What error do we incur by only including quasinormal modes, and not tails? What other systematic effects are present in current state-of-the-art numerical waveforms? These issues, which are basic to testing fundamental physics with distorted black holes, have hardly been addressed in the literature. We use numerical relativity waveforms and accurate evolutions within black hole perturbation theory to provide some answers. We show that (i) a determination of the fundamental l = m = 2 quasinormal frequencies and damping times to within 1% or better requires the inclusion of at least the first overtone, and preferably of the first two or three overtones; (ii) a determination of the black hole mass and spin with precision better than 1% requires the inclusion of at least two quasinormal modes for any given angular harmonic mode (l, m). We also improve on previous estimates and fits for the ringdown energy radiated in the various multipoles. These results are important to quantify theoretical (as opposed to instrumental) limits in parameter estimation accuracy and tests of general relativity allowed by ringdown measurements with high signal-to-noise ratio gravitational wave detectors.",
keywords = "GENERAL-RELATIVITY, PERTURBATIONS, TESTS",
author = "Vishal Baibhav and Emanuele Berti and Vitor Cardoso and Gaurav Khanna",
year = "2018",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1103/PhysRevD.97.044048",
language = "English",
volume = "97",
journal = "Physical Review D",
issn = "2470-0010",
publisher = "American Physical Society",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Black hole spectroscopy

T2 - Systematic errors and ringdown energy estimates

AU - Baibhav, Vishal

AU - Berti, Emanuele

AU - Cardoso, Vitor

AU - Khanna, Gaurav

PY - 2018/2/28

Y1 - 2018/2/28

N2 - The relaxation of a distorted black hole to its final state provides important tests of general relativity within the reach of current and upcoming gravitational wave facilities. In black hole perturbation theory, this phase consists of a simple linear superposition of exponentially damped sinusoids (the quasinormal modes) and of a power-law tail. How many quasinormal modes are necessary to describe waveforms with a prescribed precision? What error do we incur by only including quasinormal modes, and not tails? What other systematic effects are present in current state-of-the-art numerical waveforms? These issues, which are basic to testing fundamental physics with distorted black holes, have hardly been addressed in the literature. We use numerical relativity waveforms and accurate evolutions within black hole perturbation theory to provide some answers. We show that (i) a determination of the fundamental l = m = 2 quasinormal frequencies and damping times to within 1% or better requires the inclusion of at least the first overtone, and preferably of the first two or three overtones; (ii) a determination of the black hole mass and spin with precision better than 1% requires the inclusion of at least two quasinormal modes for any given angular harmonic mode (l, m). We also improve on previous estimates and fits for the ringdown energy radiated in the various multipoles. These results are important to quantify theoretical (as opposed to instrumental) limits in parameter estimation accuracy and tests of general relativity allowed by ringdown measurements with high signal-to-noise ratio gravitational wave detectors.

AB - The relaxation of a distorted black hole to its final state provides important tests of general relativity within the reach of current and upcoming gravitational wave facilities. In black hole perturbation theory, this phase consists of a simple linear superposition of exponentially damped sinusoids (the quasinormal modes) and of a power-law tail. How many quasinormal modes are necessary to describe waveforms with a prescribed precision? What error do we incur by only including quasinormal modes, and not tails? What other systematic effects are present in current state-of-the-art numerical waveforms? These issues, which are basic to testing fundamental physics with distorted black holes, have hardly been addressed in the literature. We use numerical relativity waveforms and accurate evolutions within black hole perturbation theory to provide some answers. We show that (i) a determination of the fundamental l = m = 2 quasinormal frequencies and damping times to within 1% or better requires the inclusion of at least the first overtone, and preferably of the first two or three overtones; (ii) a determination of the black hole mass and spin with precision better than 1% requires the inclusion of at least two quasinormal modes for any given angular harmonic mode (l, m). We also improve on previous estimates and fits for the ringdown energy radiated in the various multipoles. These results are important to quantify theoretical (as opposed to instrumental) limits in parameter estimation accuracy and tests of general relativity allowed by ringdown measurements with high signal-to-noise ratio gravitational wave detectors.

KW - GENERAL-RELATIVITY

KW - PERTURBATIONS

KW - TESTS

U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.97.044048

DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.97.044048

M3 - Journal article

VL - 97

JO - Physical Review D

JF - Physical Review D

SN - 2470-0010

IS - 4

M1 - 044048

ER -

ID: 299200247