Echoes from the Abyss: Tentative evidence for Planck-scale structure at black hole horizons
Jahed Abedi, Hannah Dykaar, Niayesh Afshordi

TL;DR
This paper investigates gravitational wave data for echoes that could indicate quantum-scale modifications near black hole horizons, providing tentative evidence for Planck-scale structure that challenges classical black hole models.
Contribution
It introduces a search for gravitational wave echoes linked to Planck-scale departures from classical black hole horizons, offering the first tentative observational evidence for such structures.
Findings
Tentative 2.5 sigma evidence for echoes in LIGO data
Echo time-delays consistent with Planck-scale effects
Supports the possibility of quantum modifications near horizons
Abstract
In classical General Relativity (GR), an observer falling into an astrophysical black hole is not expected to experience anything dramatic as she crosses the event horizon. However, tentative resolutions to problems in quantum gravity, such as the cosmological constant problem, or the black hole information paradox, invoke significant departures from classicality in the vicinity of the horizon. It was recently pointed out that such near-horizon structures can lead to late-time echoes in the black hole merger gravitational wave signals that are otherwise indistinguishable from GR. We search for observational signatures of these echoes in the gravitational wave data released by advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), following the three black hole merger events GW150914, GW151226, and LVT151012. In particular, we look for repeating damped echoes with…
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