Abstract

The nonlinear memory effect is a fascinating prediction of general relativity (GR), in which oscillatory gravitational-wave (GW) signals are generically accompanied by a monotonically-increasing strain which persists in the detector long after the signal has passed. This effect is directly accessible to GW observatories, and presents a unique opportunity to test GR in the dynamical and nonlinear regime. In this article we calculate, for the first time, the nonlinear memory signal associated with GW bursts from cusps and kinks on cosmic string loops, which are an important target for current and future GW observatories. We obtain analytical waveforms for the GW memory from cusps and kinks, and use these to calculate the ‘memory of the memory’ and other higher-order memory effects. These are among the first memory observables computed for a cosmological source of GWs, with previous literature having focused almost entirely on astrophysical sources. Surprisingly, we find that the cusp GW signal diverges for sufficiently large loops, and argue that the most plausible explanation for this divergence is a breakdown in the weak-field treatment of GW emission from the cusp. This shows that previously-neglected strong gravity effects must play an important rôle near cusps, although the exact mechanism by which they cure the divergence is not currently understood. We show that one possible resolution is for these cusps to collapse to form primordial black holes (PBHs); the kink memory signal does not diverge, in agreement with the fact that kinks are not predicted to form PBHs. Finally, we investigate the prospects for detecting memory from cusps and kinks with current and future GW observatories, considering both individual memory bursts and the contribution of many such bursts to the stochastic GW background. We find that in the scenario where the cusp memory divergence is cured by PBH formation, the memory signal is strongly suppressed and is not likely to be detected. However, alternative resolutions of the cusp divergence may in principle lead to much more favourable observational prospects.

Highlights

  • The advent of gravitational-wave (GW) astronomy has given us unprecedented observational access to gravity in the dynamical, nonlinear regime, allowing us to test the predictions of Einstein’s general relativity (GR) in this regime as never before [1,2,3]

  • The nonlinear memory effect is a fascinating prediction of general relativity (GR), in which oscillatory gravitational-wave (GW) signals are generically accompanied by a monotonically-increasing strain which persists in the detector long after the signal has passed

  • We focus instead on the nonlinear memory generated by another key GW source: cosmic strings [69,70,71,72]—linelike topological defects which may have formed in a cosmological phase transition in the early Universe due to a spontaneously-broken U(1) symmetry, whose production is a generic prediction of many theories beyond the standard model [73]

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Summary

A C Jenkins and M Sakellariadou

GW observatories, considering both individual memory bursts and the contribution of many such bursts to the stochastic GW background.

Introduction
Nonlinear GW memory
Late-time memory
Frequency-domain memory waveforms
Cosmic string burst waveforms
Memory from cusps
Beaming effects
Full waveform
Time-domain waveform near the arrival time
Radiated energy
Ultraviolet divergence of the radiated energy
Second-order memory
Memory from cusp collapse
Memory from kinks
Higher-order memory
Caveats of our approach
Detection prospects
Burst searches
Stochastic background searches
Consequences for the loop distribution function
Summary and conclusion
Data availability statement
Gaussian pulse as a toy model
Application to cosmic strings
Application to compact binaries
Full Text
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