Astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics with compact binary coalescence and the Einstein Telescope
Chris Van Den Broeck

TL;DR
The paper discusses the potential of the Einstein Telescope, a third-generation gravitational wave observatory, to revolutionize astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics through advanced detection of compact binary coalescence signals.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the scientific opportunities and capabilities of the Einstein Telescope for studying gravitational waves and related astrophysical phenomena.
Findings
Access to sources at cosmological distances (z ~ 3)
Ability to determine neutron star and black hole mass functions
High-precision tests of strong-field gravity
Abstract
The second-generation interferometric gravitational wave detectors currently under construction are expected to make their first detections within this decade. This will firmly establish gravitational wave physics as an empirical science and will open up a new era in astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics. Already with the first detections, we will be able to, among other things, establish the nature of short-hard gamma ray bursts, definitively confirm the existence of black holes, measure the Hubble constant in a completely independent way, and for the first time gain access to the genuinely strong-field dynamics of gravity. Hence it is timely to consider the longer-term future of this new field. The Einstein Telescope (ET) is a concrete conceptual proposal for a third-generation gravitational wave observatory, which will be ~10 times more sensitive in strain than the…
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