Published October 15, 2025 | Version Published
Journal Article Open

Ringdown of a black hole surrounded by a thin shell of matter

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Abstract

Recent studies have shown that far-field perturbations to the curvature potential of a black hole spacetime may destabilize its quasinormal mode (QNM) spectrum while only mildly affecting time-domain ringdown signals. In this work, we study the QNM spectrum and ringdown behavior of a Schwarzschild black hole with a far-field perturbation to its physical environment—a thin matter shell with finite surface tension. After accounting for the dynamics of the interaction between GWs and the shell, we find that the fundamental mode can migrate perturbatively or be destabilized by the appearance of new modes with no analog in the vacuum case, much like studies of “bumps” in the curvature potential. However, unlike these previous works, we find that the coupling between metric perturbations and oscillations of the shell also sources weakly damped QNMs, which are exclusive to the polar sector. We then study whether the analysis tools of least-squares QNM fits and the full and rational ringdown filters can clearly identify the signatures of the shell in representative ringdown waveforms. We conclude that ringdown at sufficiently early times is insensitive to the shell; weakly damped QNMs (in the polar sector) and echoes, which may enable the analysis methods considered here to infer the presence of a shell, only appear at late times and are generally weak.

Copyright and License

© 2025 American Physical Society.

Acknowledgement

A. L. is grateful for support from the Fannie and John Hertz Foundation. D. L. acknowledges support from the Simons Foundation through Award No. 896696, NSF Grant No. PHY-2207650, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration through Award No. 80NSSC22K0806. C. W. and Y. C.’s research is supported by the Simons Foundation (Award No. 568762), the Brinson Foundation, and the National Science Foundation (via Grants No. PHY-2309211 and No. PHY 2309231). We thank Brian Seymour, Adrian Ka-Wai Chung, Sizheng Ma, Isaac Legred, and Ling Sun for helpful discussions.

Data Availability

The data that support the findings of this article are openly available [87].

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Additional details

Related works

Is new version of
Discussion Paper: arXiv:2506.00367 (arXiv)
Is supplemented by
Dataset: 10.5281/zenodo.15586889 (DOI)

Funding

Hertz Foundation
Simons Foundation
896696
National Science Foundation
PHY-2207650
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
80NSSC22K0806
Simons Foundation
568762
Brinson Foundation
National Science Foundation
PHY-2309211
National Science Foundation
PHY 2309231

Dates

Accepted
2025-09-24

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
TAPIR, Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics, Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy (PMA)
Publication Status
Published