Testing Alternative Theories of Gravity using LISA
Clifford M Will (Washington University, St. Louis, Institut, d'Astrophysique de Paris), Nicolas Yunes (Pennsylvania State University)

TL;DR
This paper explores how gravitational wave observations with LISA can set bounds on alternative gravity theories, including scalar-tensor models and massive graviton theories, by analyzing waveform phase modifications.
Contribution
It provides new estimates of bounds on scalar-tensor coupling and graviton mass using LISA data, improving upon previous analytic noise curve methods.
Findings
Lower bound on Brans-Dicke parameter > 3 ^5 for neutron star-black hole inspirals.
Graviton Compton wavelength bounds range from 10^15 km to 5 ^16 km for supermassive black hole binaries.
Bounds depend on system mass, observation time, and LISA noise parameters.
Abstract
We investigate the possible bounds which could be placed on alternative theories of gravity using gravitational wave detection from inspiralling compact binaries with the proposed LISA space interferometer. Specifically, we estimate lower bounds on the coupling parameter \omega of scalar-tensor theories of the Brans-Dicke type and on the Compton wavelength of the graviton \lambda_g in hypothetical massive graviton theories. In these theories, modifications of the gravitational radiation damping formulae or of the propagation of the waves translate into a change in the phase evolution of the observed gravitational waveform. We obtain the bounds through the technique of matched filtering, employing the LISA Sensitivity Curve Generator (SCG), available online. For a neutron star inspiralling into a 10^3 M_sun black hole in the Virgo Cluster, in a two-year integration, we find a lower bound…
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