The neutrino gravitational memory from a core collapse supernova: phenomenology and physics potential
Mainak Mukhopadhyay, Carlos Cardona, Cecilia Lunardini

TL;DR
This paper models the gravitational memory effect caused by supernova neutrinos, predicting detectable signals with future gravitational wave detectors, which could reveal details of core-collapse supernova dynamics.
Contribution
Develops a phenomenological analytical model for supernova neutrino memory consistent with simulations, and explores its detectability with next-generation gravitational wave observatories.
Findings
Dimensionless strain h(t) ~ 10^{-22} to 10^{-21} for galactic supernovae.
Characteristic strain peaks at ~0.1 to 1 Hz frequency.
Next-generation detectors can observe the effect at distances beyond 10 Mpc.
Abstract
General Relativity predicts that the passage of matter or radiation from an asymmetrically-emitting source should cause a permanent change in the local space-time metric. This phenomenon, called the \emph{gravitational memory effect}, has never been observed, however supernova neutrinos have long been considered a promising avenue for its detection in the future. With the advent of deci-Hertz gravitational wave interferometers, observing the supernova neutrino memory will be possible, with important implications for multimessenger astronomy and for tests of gravity. In this work, we develop a phenomenological (analytical) toy model for the supernova neutrino memory effect, which is overall consistent with the results of numerical simulations. This description is then generalized to several case studies of interest. We find that, for a galactic supernova, the dimensionless strain,…
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