Effective Field Theory of Black Hole Echoes
C.P. Burgess, Ryan Plestid, Markus Rummel

TL;DR
This paper applies effective field theory to black hole echoes, linking near-horizon reflection properties to boundary conditions and RG flow, clarifying how modifications to gravity affect observable signals.
Contribution
It develops an EFT framework for black hole echoes, relating boundary conditions to low-energy couplings and RG evolution, advancing understanding of near-horizon physics and potential gravity modifications.
Findings
Robin boundary conditions dominate at low energies
Effective couplings relate to measurable reflection coefficients
Perfect absorption/emission are RG fixed points
Abstract
Gravitational wave `echoes' during black-hole merging events have been advocated as possible signals of modifications to gravity in the strong-field (but semiclassical) regime. In these proposals the observable effect comes entirely from the appearance of nonzero reflection probability at the horizon, which vanishes for a standard black hole. We show how to apply EFT reasoning to these arguments, using and extending earlier work for localized systems that relates choices of boundary condition to the action for the physics responsible for these boundary conditions. EFT reasoning applied to this action argues that linear `Robin' boundary conditions dominate at low energies, and we determine the relationship between the corresponding effective coupling (whose value is the one relevant low-energy prediction of particular modifications to General Relativity for these systems) and the…
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