Test-Field vs Physical Quasi-Normal Modes in Scalar-Tensor Theories
In the context of the general effort to model black hole dynamics, and in particular their return-to-equilibrium through quasi-normal modes, it is crucial to understand how much test-field perturbations deviate from physical perturbations in modified gravity scenarios. On the one hand, physical pert...
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Main Authors | , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
22.05.2025
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
DOI | 10.48550/arxiv.2505.16883 |
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Summary: | In the context of the general effort to model black hole dynamics, and in
particular their return-to-equilibrium through quasi-normal modes, it is
crucial to understand how much test-field perturbations deviate from physical
perturbations in modified gravity scenarios. On the one hand, physical
perturbations follow the modified Einstein equations of the considered
extension of general relativity. The complexity of those equations can quickly
escalate with extra fields and non-linear couplings. On the other hand,
test-field perturbations, with negligible back-reaction on the space-time
geometry, describe the propagation of both matter fields and spin $s=2$
gravitational waves on the black hole geometry. They are not subject to the
intricacies of the modified Einstein equations, and only probe the background
spacetime metric. If their physics were to not deviate significantly from
physical perturbations, they would be especially useful to investigate
predictions from quantum gravity scenarios which lack explicit detailed
Einstein equations.
Here we focus on a specific modified gravity solution -- BCL black holes in
scalar-tensor theories -- for which physical perturbations and related QNM
frequencies have already been studied and computed numerically. We compute the
test-field QNM frequencies and compare the two QNM spectra. This provides a
concrete example of the significant differences arising between test-fields and
physical perturbations, and flags unphysical deviations related to the
test-field framework. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2505.16883 |