Amaldi Research Center Seminars

Mapping spacetime around supermassive black holes with gravitational waves

by Pau Amaro Seoane (IEEC Institute of Space Studies of Catalonia)

Europe/Rome
Aula Conversi (Dipartimento di Fisica - Ed. G. Marconi)

Aula Conversi

Dipartimento di Fisica - Ed. G. Marconi

Description

The era of gravitational wave astronomy has arrived. We can now not just observe the universe, but listen to it with Gravitational Waves. When a compact object ventures too close a supermassive black hole, it is captured because of the emission of gravitational waves, to be eventually swallowed whole when it crosses the event horizon. When doing so, it radiates energy which can be thought of as a snapshot containing detailed information about spacetime and all the physical parameters of the system with ridiculous errors. The process represents a mapping of warped spacetime, a unique probe of gravity in the strong regime. Thanks to these captures, we are able to address fundamental questions: Do black holes exist, how do they win their colossal mass through their cosmic history, and what is the nature of their event horizon?

Organised by

Raffaella Schneider