Curvature conditions for generalized singularity theorems

By: Jeremías Daín, Gustavo Dotti

We study the curvature conditions introduced in [Class. Quant. Grav. 27, 152002] to predict focal points for trapped spacelike submanifolds in spacetimes of arbitrary dimensions, with the purpose of generalizing Penrose's singularity theorem to compact trapped submanifolds (CTMs) of codimension higher than two. We find that these conditions do not apply in general but may apply for specific CTMs. As a result, higher codimension CTMs may still... more
We study the curvature conditions introduced in [Class. Quant. Grav. 27, 152002] to predict focal points for trapped spacelike submanifolds in spacetimes of arbitrary dimensions, with the purpose of generalizing Penrose's singularity theorem to compact trapped submanifolds (CTMs) of codimension higher than two. We find that these conditions do not apply in general but may apply for specific CTMs. As a result, higher codimension CTMs may still work as singularity predictors, although the possibility that they intersect the domain of outer communications cannot be ruled out using standard arguments. less
Short Gravitational-Wave Transients as Probes of Cosmic Domain Walls

By: Tore Boybeyi, Doga Veske, David Maibach

GW190521 and GW231123 have been reported as short-duration gravitational-wave transients consistent with very massive binary black hole (BBH) coalescences whose inferred parameters, i.e., exceptionally high total masses and spin magnitudes, challenge standard isolated binary stellar evolution. We test a topological dark matter (TDM) interpretation invoking cosmic domain walls by fitting a physically motivated domain wall template to the LIGO ... more
GW190521 and GW231123 have been reported as short-duration gravitational-wave transients consistent with very massive binary black hole (BBH) coalescences whose inferred parameters, i.e., exceptionally high total masses and spin magnitudes, challenge standard isolated binary stellar evolution. We test a topological dark matter (TDM) interpretation invoking cosmic domain walls by fitting a physically motivated domain wall template to the LIGO Hanford and Livingston strain data. The BBH hypothesis is individually favored, with $\log_{10}\mathcal{B}_{\rm BBH/TDM}=12.2$ and $11.3$ for GW231123 and GW190521, respectively. However, these values are lower than those typically recovered from matched maximum a posteriori BBH waveforms injected into nearby noise segments. We further perform, for the first time, a joint fit in which domain wall signals from a single underlying scalar field are constrained simultaneously by both events. Although not favored over BBH signals, we find the two events are consistent with a common scalar field, with shared TDM parameters agreeing across independent noise realizations and sky locations. We further find that injected TDM transients are systematically recovered under the BBH hypothesis with large spin parameters, revealing a morphological degeneracy that could mask genuine domain wall signals. This analysis demonstrates that multi-event parameter consistency tests provide a new discriminant for domain wall dark matter searches in upcoming observing runs. less
Spherically symmetric, asymptotically flat Berwald vacuum solutions in Finsler gravity

By: Nicoleta Voicu, Diana - Maria Birla, Christian Pfeifer

So-called Berwald-Finsler spacetimes are Finsler spacetimes that are closest to pseudo-Riemannian geometry, as their canonical nonlinear connection defines an affine connection on spacetime. In spherical symmetry, these geometries can be used to describe the gravitational field outside of compact objects. We solve the Finsler gravity vacuum equation for $SO(3)$-symmetric Berwald spacetimes that are asyptotically flat, but not Ricci flat. We f... more
So-called Berwald-Finsler spacetimes are Finsler spacetimes that are closest to pseudo-Riemannian geometry, as their canonical nonlinear connection defines an affine connection on spacetime. In spherical symmetry, these geometries can be used to describe the gravitational field outside of compact objects. We solve the Finsler gravity vacuum equation for $SO(3)$-symmetric Berwald spacetimes that are asyptotically flat, but not Ricci flat. We find that among all spherically symmetric Berwald spacetimes, only one class is compatible with asymptotic flatness and a well defined causal structure. For this class, we completely solve the Finsler gravity vacuum equation and find three families of non-Ricci flat solutions -- which represent the first non-trivial, exact spherically symmetric vacuum solutions. They are so-called $(α,β)$-Finsler spacetimes that are constructed from a pseudo-Riemannnian metric and a 1-form. In particular, we show, by providing a concrete example, that in Finsler geometry there exist $SO(3)$-symmetric, asymptotically flat vacuum solutions that are not Ricci flat; these solutions are promising candidates to model the gravitational field around compact objects, beyond their Riemannian description. less
Black Bounce Solutions from a Self-Interacting 3-Form Field in General Relativity

By: Francisco S. N. Lobo, Manuel E. Rodrigues

We construct a new class of black-bounce solutions sourced by a self-interacting 3-form field minimally coupled to general relativity and a scalar field. The 3-form field, which naturally arises in string theory, supergravity, and cosmological models, provides the anisotropic effective stresses required to sustain regular geometries that interpolate smoothly between black holes and traversable wormholes. By exploiting the Hodge duality betwee... more
We construct a new class of black-bounce solutions sourced by a self-interacting 3-form field minimally coupled to general relativity and a scalar field. The 3-form field, which naturally arises in string theory, supergravity, and cosmological models, provides the anisotropic effective stresses required to sustain regular geometries that interpolate smoothly between black holes and traversable wormholes. By exploiting the Hodge duality between a 3-form and a 1-form in four dimensions, we reduce the field equations and obtain exact solutions through the direct integration of the coupled equations of motion. In particular, the solutions are derived from algebraic combinations and manipulations of the Einstein, scalar, and 3-form field equations, starting from a complete action principle, without employing the usual reconstruction procedure in which the metric ansatz is imposed a priori and the matter sector is reconstructed afterwards. This approach reveals two distinct classes of solutions. The first one yields a globally phantom scalar field and a metric function with a characteristic arctangent dependence, reducing to the Schwarzschild-(anti) de Sitter spacetime in the limit of vanishing 3-form coupling. The second class produces a constant 3-form Lagrangian and, remarkably, a partially canonical scalar field, namely phantom only near the bounce and canonical outside the event horizon, a feature previously attainable mainly in modified theories of gravity, but which emerges here within pure general relativity. Both families are globally regular, as confirmed by the finiteness of the Kretschmann scalar, and exhibit an asymmetric horizon structure inherited from the 3-form energy-density distribution. These results demonstrate that the 3-form black-bounce framework is both mathematically consistent and observationally viable. less
Detecting Tidal Resonances in Binary Neutron Stars

By: Fabian Gittins, Harsh Narola, Thibeau Wouters, Peter T. H. Pang, Tanja Hinderer, Chris Van Den Broeck

As a binary neutron star inspirals due to the emission of gravitational waves, the rising tidal frequency resonantly excites vibrational modes. These oscillations are seismological probes of the rich stellar interior, yet it remains to be established whether gravitational-wave interferometers can measure them. Here, we present the first fully Bayesian study of the capability of the Einstein Telescope to detect tidal resonances. We simulate on... more
As a binary neutron star inspirals due to the emission of gravitational waves, the rising tidal frequency resonantly excites vibrational modes. These oscillations are seismological probes of the rich stellar interior, yet it remains to be established whether gravitational-wave interferometers can measure them. Here, we present the first fully Bayesian study of the capability of the Einstein Telescope to detect tidal resonances. We simulate one year of observations and analyse the 200 loudest signals. We find that the Einstein Telescope can identify resonant modes and is sensitive to gravitational-wave phase shifts as small as $ΔΦ\approx 0.03$ for favourable events. We further show that neglecting resonances can bias the inferred tidal deformabilities. These results establish tidal resonances as a measurable route for asteroseismology with future detectors. less
Mapping the star formation peak with LIGO A# and Next-Generation detectors

By: Divyajyoti, Stephen Fairhurst, Mark Hannam, Mukesh Kumar Singh

Measuring the redshift evolution of star formation rate density is crucial in understanding the origin and evolution of galaxies and large scale structure in the universe. It is currently measured with electromagnetic probes, however, these probes often track luminosity, which is then converted to star formation rate (SFR) depending on various factors such as initial mass function, dust extinction, etc. Gravitational waves provide an independ... more
Measuring the redshift evolution of star formation rate density is crucial in understanding the origin and evolution of galaxies and large scale structure in the universe. It is currently measured with electromagnetic probes, however, these probes often track luminosity, which is then converted to star formation rate (SFR) depending on various factors such as initial mass function, dust extinction, etc. Gravitational waves provide an independent method to constrain SFR at high redshifts by tracking the redshift evolution obtained from analysis of binary black hole mergers. In this study we explore three population models for star-formation combined with an \textit{inverse} time-delay model and demonstrate that it is possible to obtain bounds on the peak of redshift distribution with a network of upgraded LIGO detectors (such as LIGO-A#). For a year of observation, using simulated signals with a merger rate peak at $z_\text{peak}=1.5$, a network of LIGO detectors at A# sensitivity is able to constrain the peak of merger rate with a precision of $\pm 0.1$. Further, we obtain the results with a next-generation network (of Cosmic Explorer and Einstein Telescope) and conclude that the redshift distribution will be extremely well measured, with a precision of $\pm 0.02$, with future detectors. less
Self-force calculations with numerical relativity methods

By: Nils L. Vu, Nami Nishimura, Thomas Osburn, Jonathan E. Thompson, Lawrence E. Kidder, Samuel D. Upton, Barry Wardell

To model gravitational waveforms from extreme mass-ratio inspirals (EMRIs) for the upcoming LISA space mission, gravitational self-force calculations are needed to second order in perturbation theory. However, to date these calculations have only been attempted for the simplest case of circular orbits in Schwarzschild spacetime. In this work, we present a new computational method aimed at performing generic second-order self-force calculation... more
To model gravitational waveforms from extreme mass-ratio inspirals (EMRIs) for the upcoming LISA space mission, gravitational self-force calculations are needed to second order in perturbation theory. However, to date these calculations have only been attempted for the simplest case of circular orbits in Schwarzschild spacetime. In this work, we present a new computational method aimed at performing generic second-order self-force calculations in Kerr spacetime using methods from the adjacent field of numerical relativity. We perform an $m$-mode separation of variables, add null ("$vtu$") slicing in horizon-penetrating coordinates, and solve the resulting elliptic PDEs using high-order discontinuous Galerkin discretization, adaptive mesh-refinement, and an iterative Krylov-type linear solver with parallelizable multigrid-Schwarz preconditioning. We find that our method achieves exponential convergence for the self-force on a scalar point charge in Kerr spacetime up to spins of $a=0.998$ (Thorne limit) on circular equatorial orbits as close as the ISCO (prograde and retrograde), despite the non-smooth puncture on the grid. We solve for 20 $m$-modes in parallel in a few seconds and retain the flexibility to extend the method to gravitational self-force and more generic orbits in the future. The code to perform these calculations is publicly available in the open-source numerical relativity code SpECTRE. less
High-Order Summation-By-Parts Schemes for First-Order Hyperbolic Systems in Curvilinear Coordinates with Singularities

By: Stamatis Vretinaris, Erik Schnetter

Formulating stable numerical methods for hyperbolic systems in curvilinear coordinate with singularities, e.g. spherical coordinates, is complicated by the presence of these singularities. We present a method for constructing high-order accurate, energy-stable finite difference operators satisfying the Summation-by-Parts (SBP) property on spherical domains, extending ideas presented by [C. Gundlach, J. M. Martín-García, and D. Garfinkle, CQG ... more
Formulating stable numerical methods for hyperbolic systems in curvilinear coordinate with singularities, e.g. spherical coordinates, is complicated by the presence of these singularities. We present a method for constructing high-order accurate, energy-stable finite difference operators satisfying the Summation-by-Parts (SBP) property on spherical domains, extending ideas presented by [C. Gundlach, J. M. Martín-García, and D. Garfinkle, CQG 30, 145003 (2013)]. We define discrete gradient and divergence operators that mirror the continuous integration-by-parts principle, even though there is a $1/r^p$ coordinate singularity present at the origin. We explicitly construct such operators up to order six. Our operators place a grid point directly on the origin. We also review how to construct stable SBP operators that straddle the origin. We analyze the accuracy and spectral radii of these operators, and we show example evolutions of the scalar wave equation to demonstrate the advantages of such operators. less
Fast gravitational waveform models for quasi-circular coalescences of neutron star--black hole binaries

By: Felip A. Ramis Vidal, Adrian Abac, Marta Colleoni, Tim Dietrich, Pierre Mourier, Alejandra Gonzalez, Ivan Markin, Anna Puecher

We present IMRPhenomXHM_NSBH and SEOBNRv5HM_ROM_NRTidalv3_NSBH, the first two frequency-domain models for gravitational-wave signals from quasi-circular, aligned-spin neutron star--black hole (NSBH) binaries including higher-order modes beyond the dominant quadrupole. We also present IMRPhenomXPHM_NSBH, an extension of the former model to the spin-precessing case. These models incorporate tidal effects in the gravitational-wave phasing and am... more
We present IMRPhenomXHM_NSBH and SEOBNRv5HM_ROM_NRTidalv3_NSBH, the first two frequency-domain models for gravitational-wave signals from quasi-circular, aligned-spin neutron star--black hole (NSBH) binaries including higher-order modes beyond the dominant quadrupole. We also present IMRPhenomXPHM_NSBH, an extension of the former model to the spin-precessing case. These models incorporate tidal effects in the gravitational-wave phasing and amplitude using a higher-mode extension of the NRTidalv3 model as well as dedicated amplitude models calibrated to numerical relativity (NR) simulations of NSBH mergers. We test the performance and validity of the new models by comparing them to NR simulations and other existing models for these systems. Finally, we perform parameter estimation studies. The new models show clear improvements over their predecessors in analyses of simulated signals, while yielding results consistent with the literature when applied to real events from the GWTC-3 and GWTC-4 catalogs. less
The geometry of lunar gravitational wave detection

By: Jacopo Tissino, Filippo Santoliquido, Francesco Iacovelli, Ulyana Dupletsa, Tito Dal Canton, Matteo Ballelli, Ansh Chopra, Luis Enrique Espinosa Castro, Laura Pezzella, Matteo Schulz, Izumi Takimoto Schmiegelow, Jan Harms

The Lunar Gravitational Wave Antenna (LGWA) is a planned gravitational wave detector on the Moon, targeting the deci-Hertz band and expected to deliver breakthrough discoveries across several science cases, including the Moon's interior structure and astrophysics. In this work, we show that adopting a frame comoving with the Solar System barycenter (SSB), but with its origin at a location that minimizes timing uncertainty, reduces the samplin... more
The Lunar Gravitational Wave Antenna (LGWA) is a planned gravitational wave detector on the Moon, targeting the deci-Hertz band and expected to deliver breakthrough discoveries across several science cases, including the Moon's interior structure and astrophysics. In this work, we show that adopting a frame comoving with the Solar System barycenter (SSB), but with its origin at a location that minimizes timing uncertainty, reduces the sampling time by an order of magnitude. We present a systematic post-processing procedure to identify the optimal origin within the Solar System for any given signal. We explore alternative timing parametrizations beyond the merger time, and find that they have only a minor impact on parameter uncertainties. Using the stellar-mass black hole binary GW250114 as a case study, we illustrate how these geometrical considerations translate into improved parameter constraints. Two minutes before its merger, the LGWA would have measured its chirp mass to a precision of 0.0002 solar masses (90% symmetric) and constrained its sky position to within 65 square degrees (90% HPD area); these constraints are tighter than those obtained by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) detectors, despite a lower signal-to-noise ratio. We connect our results to an analytical approximation proposed by Wen and Chen, which relates the area spanned by the orbital motion of a detector to its efficacy in constraining the sky position of a source. We verify its qualitative validity for compact binary sources with a series of injections, identifying the regimes in which its underlying assumptions break down. Our results demonstrate that inference for long-duration GW signals with the LGWA must be treated as a geometrical problem, in which detector motion, reference-frame choice, and signal evolution jointly determine both parameter constraints and computational efficiency. less