Some geometrical aspects of gravitational waves using continuum mechanics analogy: State of the art and potential consequences
David Izabel, Yves Remond, Matteo Luca Ruggiero

TL;DR
This paper explores the analogy between continuum mechanics and general relativity to analyze gravitational wave deformations, revealing potential anisotropies and alternative polarization states through elastic media models and torsion concepts.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach linking gravitational wave polarizations to elastic media deformation tensors and torsion, expanding the understanding of space deformations beyond classical general relativity.
Findings
Gravitational wave polarizations can be modeled as elastic media deformations.
Anisotropy in space properties is unavoidable at measurement points.
Classical polarizations relate to pure torsion states in elastic analogies.
Abstract
In this study, the authors employ the analogy between continuum mechanics and general relativity to investigate, from the perspective of elasticity and crystal plasticity, the deformations of space measured by LIGO/VIRGO interferometers during the passage of gravitational waves over Earth. The results of different innovative or existing mechanical models are compared with each other and compared with the observations in the framework of general relativity and Einstein-Cartan theory. Despite limitations, there is a convergence of results: the polarizations of gravitational waves can be viewed as expressions of an equivalent elastic media deformation tensor. Additionally, an anisotropy of space properties is unavoidable at the measurement point of the gravitational wave if we rely on the current first-order general relativity, which predict that gravitational waves generate deformations…
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