English

Testing general relativity with gravitational waves: a reality check

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2012-10-09 v2

Abstract

The observations of gravitational-wave signals from astrophysical sources such as binary inspirals will be used to test General Relativity for self consistency and against alternative theories of gravity. I describe a simple formula that can be used to characterize the prospects of such tests, by estimating the matched-filtering signal-to-noise ratio required to detect non-General-Relativistic corrections of a given magnitude. The formula is valid for sufficiently strong signals; it requires the computation of a single number, the fitting factor between the General-Relativistic and corrected waveform families; and it can be applied to all tests that embed General Relativity in a larger theory, including tests of individual theories such as Brans-Dicke gravity, as well as the phenomenological schemes that introduce corrections and extra terms in the post-Newtonian phasing expressions of inspiral waveforms. The formula suggests that the volume-limited gravitational-wave searches performed with second-generation ground-based detectors would detect alternative-gravity corrections to General-Relativistic waveforms no smaller than 1-10% (corresponding to fitting factors of 0.9 to 0.99).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1207.4759,
  title  = {Testing general relativity with gravitational waves: a reality check},
  author = {Michele Vallisneri},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1207.4759},
  year   = {2012}
}

Comments

7 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX 4.1, final published version

R2 v1 2026-06-21T21:38:40.103Z