Nonlinear gravitational-wave memory from cusps and kinks on cosmic strings
Alexander C. Jenkins, Mairi Sakellariadou

TL;DR
This paper calculates the nonlinear gravitational-wave memory from cusps and kinks on cosmic strings, revealing divergences and potential resolutions like primordial black hole formation, and assesses detectability prospects with current and future GW observatories.
Contribution
It provides the first analytical waveforms for GW memory from cosmic string cusps and kinks, exploring divergence issues and their possible physical resolutions.
Findings
Cusp GW signals diverge for large loops, indicating breakdown of weak-field approximation.
Kink memory signals do not diverge, consistent with no PBH formation from kinks.
Detection prospects are low if divergence is resolved by PBH formation, but alternative resolutions could improve detectability.
Abstract
The nonlinear memory effect is a fascinating prediction of general relativity (GR), in which oscillatory gravitational-wave (GW) signals are generically accompanied by a monotonically-increasing strain which persists in the detector long after the signal has passed. This effect presents a unique opportunity to test GR in the dynamical and nonlinear regime. In this article we calculate the nonlinear memory signal associated with GW bursts from cusps and kinks on cosmic string loops, which are an important target for current and future GW observatories. We obtain analytical waveforms for the GW memory from cusps and kinks, and use these to calculate the "memory of the memory" and other higher-order memory effects. These are among the first memory observables computed for a cosmological source of GWs, with previous literature having focused almost entirely on astrophysical sources.…
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