TL;DR
This study tests for gravitational-wave birefringence using a large catalog of events, finding no general evidence but intriguing signals in two massive events, and setting new constraints on parity violation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive Bayesian analysis of gravitational-wave birefringence across 94 events, improving constraints and exploring potential links to electromagnetic counterparts.
Findings
No evidence for birefringence in most events.
GW190521 and GW191109 show possible birefringence signals.
Constraints on parity-violating energy scale are improved fivefold.
Abstract
We report the results of testing gravitational-wave birefringence using the largest population of gravitational-wave events currently available. Gravitational-wave birefringence, which can arise from the effective field theory extension of general relativity, occurs when the parity symmetry is broken, causing the left- and right-handed polarizations to propagate following different equations of motion. We perform Bayesian inference on the 94 events reported by the 4th-Open Gravitational-wave Catalog (4-OGC) using a parity-violating waveform. We find no evidence for a violation of general relativity in the vast majority of events. However, the most massive event, GW190521, and the second most massive event, GW191109, show intriguing non-zero results for gravitational-wave birefringence. We find that the probability of association between GW190521 and the possible electromagnetic (EM)…
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