Gravitational wave lensing beyond general relativity: birefringence, echoes and shadows
Jose Mar\'ia Ezquiaga, Miguel Zumalac\'arregui

TL;DR
This paper develops a formalism to analyze gravitational wave lensing beyond general relativity, revealing phenomena like birefringence, echoes, and shadows that could test alternative gravity theories.
Contribution
It introduces a new framework for computing GW propagation in theories beyond GR, including kinetic interactions with extra fields, and explores observable effects such as birefringence and GW shadows.
Findings
Birefringence causes time delays between GW polarizations.
GW echoes and waveform scrambling result from propagation delays.
Shadows form from non-propagating metric components near lenses.
Abstract
Gravitational waves (GW), as light, are gravitationally lensed by intervening matter, deflecting their trajectories, delaying their arrival and occasionally producing multiple images. In theories beyond general relativity (GR), new gravitational degrees of freedom add an extra layer of complexity and richness to GW lensing. We develop a formalism to compute GW propagation beyond GR over general space-times, including kinetic interactions with new fields. Our framework relies on identifying the dynamical propagation eigenstates (linear combinations of the metric and additional fields) at leading order in a short-wave expansion. We determine these eigenstates and the conditions under which they acquire a different propagation speed around a lens. Differences in speed between eigenstates cause birefringence phenomena, including time delays between the metric polarizations (orthogonal…
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