Probing Fundamental Physics with Gravitational Waves
Zack Carson

TL;DR
This paper discusses how gravitational wave observations from black hole and neutron star mergers provide a new way to explore fundamental physics, including nuclear physics and general relativity, through recent detections like GW150914 and GW170817.
Contribution
It introduces methods to analyze gravitational wave data for probing nuclear physics and testing general relativity, highlighting recent observational breakthroughs.
Findings
Detection of gravitational waves from black hole mergers
Insights into neutron star nuclear physics from tidal signals
Tests of general relativity using gravitational wave data
Abstract
The explosive coalescence of two black holes 1.3 billion light years away has for the very first time allowed us to peer into the extreme gravity region of spacetime surrounding these events. With these maximally compact objects reaching speeds up to 60% the speed of light, collision events such as these create harsh spacetime environments where the fields are strong, non-linear, and highly dynamical -- a place yet un-probed in human history. On September 14, 2015, the iconic chirp signal from such an event was registered simultaneously by both of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors -- by an unparalleled feat of modern engineering. Dubbed "GW150914", this gravitational wave event paved the way for an entirely new observing window into the universe, providing for the unique opportunity to probe fundamental physics from an entirely new viewpoint. Since…
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