论文标题
从合并后残留物周围的玻色子云中提取超轻的玻色子特性
Extracting ultralight boson properties from boson clouds around post-merger remnants
论文作者
论文摘要
超轻玻色子是一类假设的颗粒,可以解决从宇宙学到天体物理学和基本物理学等领域的关键问题。如果存在超轻的玻色子,它们会在旋转的黑洞周围形成云,该黑洞的尺寸可与粒子综合体波长相当,这是一种经典的经典波浪放大过程,已研究了数十年。在这些云形成之后,它们通过将超轻玻色子an灭入引力群中消散并发出连续的重力波。可以使用连续波搜索使用地面重力波检测器检测这些引力。但是,可以想像其他连续的波源来模仿云的发射,这可能导致错误的检测。在这里,我们研究了如何使用围绕已知合并残留物形成的云的连续波来减轻此问题。特别是,我们模拟了合并残余物的目录,该目录在它们周围形成云层,并通过精选的“黄金”合并残余物进行演示,如何对超轻玻色子假设进行贝叶斯交叉验证,从而有可能排除其他解释。我们的概念证明研究表明,将来,如果玻色子存在在相关的质量范围内,则可能存在足够近的合并残余物,可以进行分析并测试玻色子假设。未来的研究将着重于建立更复杂的连续波工具,以在实践中执行此分析。
Ultralight bosons are a class of hypothetical particles that could potentially solve critical problems in fields ranging from cosmology to astrophysics and fundamental physics. If ultralight bosons exist, they form clouds around spinning black holes with sizes comparable to their particle Compton wavelength through superradiance, a well-understood classical wave amplification process that has been studied for decades. After these clouds form, they dissipate and emit continuous gravitational waves through the annihilation of ultralight bosons into gravitons. These gravitons could be detected with ground-based gravitational-wave detectors using continuous-wave searches. However, it is conceivable for other continuous-wave sources to mimic the emission from the clouds, which could lead to false detections. Here we investigate how one can use continuous waves from clouds formed around known merger remnants to alleviate this problem. In particular, we simulate a catalogue of merger remnants that form clouds around them and demonstrate with select "golden" merger remnants how one can perform a Bayesian cross-verification of the ultralight boson hypothesis that has the potential to rule out alternative explanations. Our proof-of-concept study suggest that, in the future, there is a possibility that a merger remnant exists close enough for us to perform the analysis and test the boson hypothesis if the bosons exist in the relevant mass range. Future research will focus on building more sophisticated continuous-wave tools to perform this analysis in practice.