Can the Near-Horizon Black Hole Memory be detected through Binary Inspirals?
Sajad A. Bhat, Srijit Bhattacharjee, and Shasvath J. Kapadia

TL;DR
This paper proposes a toy model showing that black hole memory effects, caused by supertranslation hair, could be detected through gravitational waves from binary inspirals by space-based detectors like LISA.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking black hole memory effects to observable GW signatures in binary inspirals without needing detectors near the horizon.
Findings
Black hole memory can affect binary inspiral dynamics.
LISA-like detectors could observe black hole memory effects.
Supertranslation hair influences GW signals.
Abstract
The memory effect, in the context of gravitational-waves (GWs), manifests itself in the permanent relative displacement of test masses when they encounter the GWs. A number of works have explored the possibility of detecting the memory when the source and detector are separated by large distances. A special type of memory, arising from BMS symmetries, called ``black-hole memory'', has been recently proposed. The black hole memory only manifests itself in the vicinity of its event horizon. Therefore, formally observing it requires placing a GW detector at the horizon of the BH, which prima-facie seems unfeasible. In this work, we describe a toy model that suggests a possible way the black hole memory may be observed, without requiring a human-made detector near the event horizon. The model considers a binary black hole (BBH), emanating GWs observable at cosmological distances, as a proxy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCrystallography and Radiation Phenomena · Advanced X-ray Imaging Techniques · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
