Testing gravity with gauge-invariant polarization states of gravitational waves: Theory and pulsar timing sensitivity
M\'arcio E.S. Alves

TL;DR
This paper develops a gauge-invariant formalism to analyze gravitational wave polarization modes, including scalar longitudinal modes, and assesses pulsar timing sensitivity to these modes for testing extended theories of gravity.
Contribution
It introduces a new gauge-invariant approach using the Bardeen formalism to describe all polarization modes of GWs with general dispersion relations, improving analysis of gravitational wave data.
Findings
Sensitivity to scalar longitudinal modes varies with effective mass.
Pulsar timing can set tighter bounds on graviton mass than ground-based detectors.
Formalism applies to multiple gravity theories, including f(R) and quadratic gravity.
Abstract
The determination of the polarization modes of gravitational waves (GWs) and their dispersion relations is a crucial task for scrutinizing the viability of extended theories of gravity. A tool to investigate the polarization states of GWs is the well-known formalism developed by Eardley, Lee, and Lightman (ELL) [Phys. Rev. D 8, 3308 (1973)] which uses the Newman-Penrose (NP) coefficients to determine the polarization content of GWs in metric theories of gravity. However, if the speed of GWs is smaller than the speed of light, the number of NP coefficients is greater than the number of polarizations. To overcome this inconvenience we use the Bardeen formalism to describe the six possible polarization modes of GWs considering general dispersion relations for the modes. The definition of a new gauge-invariant quantity enables an unambiguous description of the scalar longitudinal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
