Artículos de revistas
Tests of General Relativity with GW150914
Fecha
2016-05-31Registro en:
Physical Review Letters, v. 116, n. 22, 2016.
1079-7114
0031-9007
10.1103/PhysRevLett.116.221101
2-s2.0-84973439864
Autor
California Institute of Technology
Louisiana State University
Università di Salerno
Complesso Universitario di Monte sant'Angelo
University of Florida
LIGO Livingston Observatory
CNRS/IN2P3
Max-Planck-Institut für Gravitationsphysik
Science Park
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais
Gran Sasso Science Institute
Sezione di Roma Tor Vergata
Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Leibniz Universität Hannover
Università di Pisa
Sezione di Pisa
Australian National University
University of Mississippi
California State University Fullerton
Université Paris-Saclay
Chennai Mathematical Institute
Università di Roma Tor Vergata
University of Southampton
Universität Hamburg
Sezione di Roma
Observatoire de Paris
Montana State University
Università di Perugia
Sezione di Perugia
European Gravitational Observatory (EGO)
Syracuse University
University of Glasgow
LIGO Hanford Observatory
RMKI
Columbia University
Stanford University
Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia
Sezione di Padova
CAMK-PAN
University of Birmingham
Università degli Studi di Genova
Sezione di Genova
RRCAT
Lomonosov Moscow State University
University of the West of Scotland
University of Western Australia
Radboud University Nijmegen
Observatoire Côte d'Azur
Lendulet Astrophysics Research Group
Université de Rennes 1
Washington State University
Cornell University
Università degli Studi di Urbino Carlo Bo
Sezione di Firenze
University of Oregon
Collège de France
Warsaw University
VU University Amsterdam
University of Maryland
Georgia Institute of Technology
UMR CNRS 5306
Université de Lyon
IAC3 - IEEC
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
University of Toronto
Tsinghua University
Texas Tech University
Pennsylvania State University
National Tsing Hua University
Charles Sturt University
University of Chicago
Caltech CaRT
Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information
Carleton College
Università di Roma la Sapienza
University of Brussels
Sonoma State University
Northwestern University
University of Minnesota
University of Melbourne
University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
University of Sheffield
University of Sannio at Benevento
Montclair State University
Dipartimento di Fisica
Trento Institute for Fundamental Physics and Applications
Cardiff University
National Astronomical Observatory of Japan
University of Edinburgh
Indian Institute of Technology
Institute for Plasma Research
University of Szeged
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
University of Michigan
American University
Rochester Institute of Technology
University of Massachusetts-Amherst
University of Adelaide
West Virginia University
University of Białystok
University of Strathclyde
CET Campus
Institute of Applied Physics
Pusan National University
Hanyang University
NCBJ
IM-PAN
Monash University
Seoul National University
University of Alabama in Huntsville
CNRS
AandM College
College of William and Mary
Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
University of Cambridge
IISER-Kolkata
HSIC
Whitman College
National Institute for Mathematical Sciences
Hobart and William Smith Colleges
University of Zielona Góra
Andrews University
Caltech JPL
Università di Siena
Trinity University
University of Washington
Kenyon College
Abilene Christian University
Sezione di Napoli
Institución
Resumen
The LIGO detection of GW150914 provides an unprecedented opportunity to study the two-body motion of a compact-object binary in the large-velocity, highly nonlinear regime, and to witness the final merger of the binary and the excitation of uniquely relativistic modes of the gravitational field. We carry out several investigations to determine whether GW150914 is consistent with a binary black-hole merger in general relativity. We find that the final remnant's mass and spin, as determined from the low-frequency (inspiral) and high-frequency (postinspiral) phases of the signal, are mutually consistent with the binary black-hole solution in general relativity. Furthermore, the data following the peak of GW150914 are consistent with the least-damped quasinormal mode inferred from the mass and spin of the remnant black hole. By using waveform models that allow for parametrized general-relativity violations during the inspiral and merger phases, we perform quantitative tests on the gravitational-wave phase in the dynamical regime and we determine the first empirical bounds on several high-order post-Newtonian coefficients. We constrain the graviton Compton wavelength, assuming that gravitons are dispersed in vacuum in the same way as particles with mass, obtaining a 90%-confidence lower bound of 1013 km. In conclusion, within our statistical uncertainties, we find no evidence for violations of general relativity in the genuinely strong-field regime of gravity.