Testing the multipole structure of compact binaries using gravitational wave observations
Shilpa Kastha, Anuradha Gupta, K. G. Arun, B. S. Sathyaprakash, Chris, Van Den Broeck

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to test the multipole structure of compact binaries using gravitational wave data, aiming to verify GR predictions and constrain alternative theories of gravity.
Contribution
It develops a parametrized multipolar phasing formula for gravitational waves, enabling measurement of multipole moments and testing GR with current and future detectors.
Findings
Advanced LIGO can measure 2-3 multipole coefficients.
Cosmic Explorer and Einstein Telescope can measure 4 multipole coefficients.
LISA can measure all 7 multipole coefficients in certain inspirals.
Abstract
We propose a novel method to test the consistency of the multipole moments of compact binary systems with the predictions of General Relativity (GR). The multipole moments of a compact binary system, known in terms of symmetric and trace-free tensors, are used to calculate the gravitational waveforms from compact binaries within the post-Newtonian (PN) formalism. For nonspinning compact binaries, we derive the gravitational wave phasing formula, in the frequency domain, parametrizing each PN order term in terms of the multipole moments which contribute to that order. Using GW observations, this {\it{parametrized multipolar phasing}} would allow us to derive the bounds on possible departures from the multipole structure of GR and hence constrain the parameter space of alternative theories of gravity. We compute the projected accuracies with which the second generation ground-based…
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