Evolution of black hole echo modes and the causality dilemma
Ramin G. Daghigh, Guan-Ru Li, Wei-Liang Qian, Stefan J. Randow

TL;DR
This paper investigates how black hole echo modes evolve and interact with traditional quasinormal modes, revealing a universal transition in waveform characteristics that has implications for gravitational wave detection.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the evolution of echo modes and their interplay with low-lying modes, supported by analytical and numerical methods, highlighting a universal transition in waveforms.
Findings
Echo modes shift towards the real axis as the potential bump moves away from the black hole.
A transition point in waveforms marks the dominance shift from damped oscillations to echo pulses.
Fourier analysis can extract echo modes from ringdown signals, aiding gravitational wave observations.
Abstract
It has been shown that black hole quasinormal modes are subject to spectral instability, typically triggered by metric perturbations. These perturbations, which can introduce a minor bump in the effective potential of the wave equation, give rise to a novel branch of asymptotic quasinormal modes, dubbed the {\it echo modes}, which lie mainly parallel to the real frequency axis. This study explores the evolution of the echo modes and their interplay with the outward spiral motion observed in low-lying quasinormal modes. As the bump in the effective potential moves away from the central black hole, the echo modes collectively shift toward the real axis, with the spacing between successive modes decreasing uniformly. This collective motion occurs simultaneously with the spiral of the low-lying modes until the echo modes eventually take over the fundamental quasinormal mode. In the time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Geophysics and Sensor Technology · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
