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New collaboration between gravitational-wave astronomy and particle physics
by Staff Writers
Potsdam, Germany (SPX) Sep 02, 2020

Black hole scattering can be treated as a particle-like interaction, in which the black holes exchange gravitons. By calculating the quantum scattering amplitudes, researchers can obtain important information about merging black hole binaries that emit gravitational waves.

The departments of Professor Alessandra Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute, AEI)) and Professor Zvi Bern (Mani L. Bhaumik Institute for Theoretical Physics (University of California in Los Angeles, UCLA)) will cooperate on developing waveform models for future gravitational-wave detectors.

Senior researcher Dr. Justin Vines will perform the balancing act between particle physics at UCLA and gravitational-wave modeling at the AEI. For the next two years, he will be based at AEI, then he will move over to UCLA. Long-term visits between both institutions are planned in order to maintain collaborations with researchers in Potsdam and Los Angeles.

The goal is to foster the use of advanced computational techniques originating from quantum field theory to develop ever more accurate gravitational waveform models, enabling further discoveries with gravitational-wave detectors as they become more and more sensitive.

"Powerful theoretical methods for predicting results of scattering processes involving elementary particles, such as those observed at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, are now also being applied to the modeling of gravitational waves from astronomical binary systems," says Dr. Justin Vines, who for the next four years will bring the two research topics at the AEI and UCLA under one roof.

While gravitational-wave astronomers are announcing one spectacular discovery after the next, they are also thinking about how to measure the signals and interpret the data from the increasingly sensitive detectors in the future.

"The more sensitive the gravitational-wave detectors become, the more accurately we'll have to model the waveforms used to search for and analyze the signals," explains Alessandra Buonanno, in whose department at the AEI Justin Vines will conduct research over the next two years before moving to UCLA.

"Using advanced techniques from quantum field theory, we now want to refine the calculation of the waveform models even further," adds the director at the AEI and College Park professor at the University of Maryland.

"The prospect of quantum scattering amplitude calculations having a direct impact on gravitational-wave science is a truly exciting one for both sides, and we look forward to continuing to push the frontiers of theoretical knowledge of classical gravitational dynamics in our collaboration with the AEI," says Zvi Bern, director of the Mani Lal Bhaumik Institute for Theoretical Physics at UCLA.

Scattering Amplitudes for Gravitational-Wave Modeling
Dr. Justin Vines will serve as a bridge between the groups at the AEI and UCLA, fostering collaborations with long-term visits between the two institutions. It has only relatively recently been realized that certain theoretical technology from the field of quantum scattering amplitudes (e.g., generalized unitarity and double-copy constructions) can be fruitfully applied to the classical relativistic two-body problem.

In continuing this process, physicists face not only technical challenges but also some potentially deep conceptual questions, for example, concerning a formal correspondence between 'minimally coupled' higher-spin quantum particles and classical spinning black holes.

"Coming from a background in classical gravity, I still have much to learn myself about the great strides made in recent decades in constructing and understanding scattering amplitudes in relativistic quantum theories. I look forward to doing so by working closely with the UCLA group as well as the AEI group. There's clear potential for both sides to learn a great deal from one another, and the contact with classical gravity may even lead to new insights of intrinsic value to the study of quantum gravitational interactions," says Justin Vines.


Related Links
Max Planck Institute For Gravitational Physics
The Physics of Time and Space


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Scientists are currently working on the launch of the Tianqin-2 satellite to test key technologies for space-based gravitational wave detection. These include the main technologies for use in next-generation gravity satellites. The Tianqin Project, China's independent space-based gravitational wave detection program, attracted much attention during a recent meeting to discuss the frontiers of space science during the 14th Five-Year Plan period, attended by dozens of Chinese experts in space scienc ... read more

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