Theoretical Physics Implications of the Binary Black-Hole Mergers GW150914 and GW151226
Nicolas Yunes, Kent Yagi, Frans Pretorius

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how GW150914 and GW151226 gravitational wave events test various non-standard physics theories, constraining mechanisms like extra dimensions, scalar fields, and exotic compact objects, thus probing strong-field gravity and wave propagation.
Contribution
It extends LIGO/Virgo analyses to a broader class of anomalies, highlighting the limitations and potential of gravitational wave observations to test beyond-GR physics.
Findings
GW events constrain scalar fields and extra dimensions.
They limit modifications to gravitational wave dispersion.
GW150914 constrains properties of exotic compact objects.
Abstract
The gravitational wave observations GW150914 and GW151226 by Advanced LIGO provide the first opportunity to learn about physics in the extreme gravity environment of coalescing binary black holes. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration have verified that this observation is consistent with General Relativity. This paper expands their analysis to a larger class of anomalies, highlighting the inferences that can be drawn on non-standard theoretical physics mechanisms. We find that these events constrain a plethora of mechanisms associated with the generation and propagation of gravitational waves, including the activation of scalar fields, gravitational leakage into large extra dimensions, the variability of Newton's constant, a modified dispersion relation, gravitational Lorentz violation and the strong equivalence principle. Though other observations limit many of…
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