Isospectrality breaking in the Teukolsky formalism
Abstract
General relativity, though the most successful theory of gravity, has been continuously modified to resolve its incompatibility with quantum mechanics and explain the origin of dark energy or dark matter. One way to test these modified gravity theories is to study the gravitational waves emitted during the ringdown of binary mergers, which consist of quasinormal modes. In several modified gravity theories, the even- and odd-parity gravitational perturbations of nonrotating and slowly rotating black holes have different quasinormal mode frequencies, breaking the isospectrality of general relativity. For black holes with arbitrary spin in modified gravity, there were no avenues to compute quasinormal modes except numerical relativity, until recent extensions of the Teukolsky formalism. In this work, we describe how to use the modified Teukolsky formalism to study isospectrality breaking in modified gravity. We first introduce how definite-parity modes are defined through combinations of Weyl scalars in general relativity, and then, we extend this definition to modified gravity. We then use the eigenvalue perturbation method to show how the degeneracy in quasinormal mode frequencies of different parity is broken in modified gravity. To demonstrate our analysis, we also apply it to some specific modified gravity theories. Our work lays the foundation for studying isospectrality breaking of quasinormal modes in modified gravity for black holes with arbitrary spin.
Copyright and License
© 2024 American Physical Society.
Acknowledgement
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Additional details
- ISSN
- 2470-0029
- Simons Foundation
- 568762
- Brinson Foundation
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-2011961
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-2011968
- Simons Foundation
- 896696
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-2207650
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- 80NSSC22K0806
- National Science Foundation
- PHY-2207594
- Caltech groups
- Astronomy Department, TAPIR, Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics