Testing Chern-Simons Modified Gravity with Gravitational-Wave Detections of Extreme-Mass-Ratio Binaries
Priscilla Canizares (1,2), Jonathan R. Gair (1), Carlos F. Sopuerta, (2) ((1) IoA, Cambridge, (2) ICE, CSIC-IEEC)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how future space-based gravitational wave detectors like LISA can test and constrain a modified theory of gravity, Chern-Simons gravity, using signals from extreme-mass-ratio inspirals.
Contribution
It provides a parameter estimation analysis demonstrating the potential of LISA to measure or bound Chern-Simons gravity deviations from General Relativity.
Findings
LISA can measure the Chern-Simons parameter with fractional errors below 5%.
LISA can improve bounds on the Chern-Simons parameter by four orders of magnitude.
The study uses approximate waveforms within a five-dimensional parameter space.
Abstract
[abridged] The detection of gravitational waves from extreme-mass-ratio (EMRI) binaries, comprising a stellar-mass compact object orbiting around a massive black hole, is one of the main targets for low-frequency gravitational-wave detectors in space, like the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA or eLISA/NGO). The long-duration gravitational-waveforms emitted by such systems encode the structure of the strong field region of the massive black hole, in which the inspiral occurs. The detection and analysis of EMRIs will therefore allow us to study the geometry of massive black holes and determine whether their nature is as predicted by General Relativity and even to test whether General Relativity is the correct theory to describe the dynamics of these systems. To achieve this, EMRI modeling in alternative theories of gravity is required to describe the generation of gravitational…
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