Constraints on quasi-normal-mode frequencies with LIGO-Virgo binary-black-hole observations
Abhirup Ghosh, Richard Brito, Alessandra Buonanno

TL;DR
This paper tests the no-hair conjecture of General Relativity by analyzing quasi-normal-mode frequencies from LIGO-Virgo binary black hole observations, providing constraints that support the Kerr black hole model.
Contribution
It introduces a method to measure QNM frequencies from the full BBH signal, including spin effects, and applies it to multiple LIGO-Virgo events to test the no-hair conjecture.
Findings
Constraints on QNM frequency deviations at 90% credibility.
Improved bounds over previous LIGO-Virgo results.
Most stringent single-event constraints from GW150914.
Abstract
The no-hair conjecture in General Relativity (GR) states that a Kerr black hole (BH) is completely described by its mass and spin. As a consequence, the complex quasi-normal-mode (QNM) frequencies of a binary-black-hole (BBH) ringdown can be uniquely determined by the mass and spin of the remnant object. Conversely, measurement of the QNM frequencies could be an independent test of the no-hair conjecture. This paper extends to spinning BHs earlier work that proposed to test the no-hair conjecture by measuring the complex QNM frequencies of a BBH ringdown using parameterized inspiral-merger-ringdown waveforms in the effective-one-body formalism, thereby taking full advantage of the entire signal power and removing dependency on the predicted or estimated start time of the ringdown. Our method was used to analyze the properties of the merger remnants for BBHs observed by LIGO-Virgo in the…
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