Long-Lived Ringing of Near-Extremal Kerr Black Holes Resonantly Driven by Extreme-Mass-Ratio Inspirals

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Long-Lived Ringing of Near-Extremal Kerr Black Holes Resonantly Driven by Extreme-Mass-Ratio Inspirals

Authors

Wen-Biao Han

Abstract

Near-extremal Kerr black holes support zero-damped modes (ZDMs), whose small time-domain damping rates make them long-lived probes of the near-horizon region. We show that bound extreme-mass-ratio inspirals (EMRIs) can resonantly drive this response in vacuum general relativity. Using frequency-domain Teukolsky amplitudes for eccentric-inclined Kerr geodesics, we identify a source-supported orbital harmonic whose real frequency falls within one pole half-width of the fundamental gravitational ZDM. In the complex response, the pole contribution is enhanced by this small half-width, while complex-response tomography recovers the independently computed Kerr pole from real-frequency orbital data. After subtracting the smooth non-pole component, the residual exhibits the phase winding of a coherent simple pole, with a pole contribution comparable to the smooth non-pole part of the EMRI-sourced Teukolsky amplitude. The driven branch also lies in the superradiant regime and carries negative horizon flux. These results establish a pole-resolved, resonantly driven ZDM response by EMRIs and make the recovered pole half-width a route to measuring the horizon surface gravity.

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