Abstract

We study the effect of cubic and tidal interactions on the spectrum of gravitational waves emitted in the inspiral phase of the merger of two non-spinning objects. There are two independent parity-even cubic interaction terms, which we take to be $I_1 = {R^{\alpha \beta}}_{\mu \nu} {R^{\mu \nu}}_{\rho \sigma} {R^{\rho \sigma}}_{\alpha \beta}$ and $G_3 = I_1-2 R^{\alpha}\,_{\mu}\,^{\beta}\,_{\nu} R^{\mu}\,_{\rho}\,^{\nu}\,_{\sigma} R^{\rho}\,_{\alpha}\,^{\sigma}\,_{\beta}$. The latter has vanishing pure graviton amplitudes but modifies mixed scalar/graviton amplitudes which are crucial for our study. Working in an effective field theory set-up, we compute the modifications to the quadrupole moment due to $I_1$, $G_3$ and tidal interactions, from which we obtain the power of gravitational waves radiated in the process to first order in the perturbations and leading order in the post-Minkowskian expansion. The $I_1$ predictions are novel, and we find that our results for $G_3$ are related to the known quadrupole corrections arising from tidal perturbations, although the physical origin of the $G_3$ coupling is unrelated to the finite-size effects underlying tidal interactions. We show this by recomputing such tidal corrections and by presenting an explicit field redefinition. In the post-Newtonian expansion our results are complete at leading order, which for the gravitational-wave flux is 5PN for $G_3$ and tidal interactions, and 6PN for $I_1$. Finally, we compute the corresponding modifications to the waveforms.

Highlights

  • The first direct detection of gravitational waves and the first observation of a binary black hole merger by the LIGO/Virgo collaboration [1] has opened a new observational window potentially challenging our understanding of gravity

  • We find that the corrections due to G3 have the same form as those generated by a particular type of tidal interaction

  • II we introduce the EFT we are discussing, reviewing some of the relevant results, including the corrections to the gravitational potential from cubic [54,55] and tidal interactions [74,75,76]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The first direct detection of gravitational waves and the first observation of a binary black hole merger by the LIGO/Virgo collaboration [1] has opened a new observational window potentially challenging our understanding of gravity. An identical conclusion for the propagation of massless particles in the background of a black hole was reached in [64], both for the I1 and G3 interactions.2 In this respect, an important observation was made in [65], namely that such superluminality effects (and those observed earlier on in [66,67,68]) are unresolvable within the regime of validity of the EFT, and do not lead to violations of causality. We find that the corrections due to G3 have the same form as those generated by a particular type of tidal interaction ( the corresponding coefficients in the EFT action are independent) We explain this result by constructing an explicit field redefinition relating the two couplings. In an Appendix we present some details on the modifications to the circular orbits due to the perturbations

The EFT action
Cubic interactions
Amplitudes from the G3 interaction
The G3 interaction as a tidal effect
Tidal effects
QUADRUPOLE MOMENTS IN EFTs OF GRAVITY
The amplitude with cubic interactions
The quadrupole corrections
The amplitude with tidal effects
E4m41 þ η2
POWER RADIATED BY THE GRAVITATIONAL WAVES
WAVEFORMS IN EFT OF GRAVITY
G vref vf dvðv3f v3Þ
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