Ringdown Overtones and Black-hole Spectroscopy
APA
Finch, E. (2025). Ringdown Overtones and Black-hole Spectroscopy. Perimeter Institute. https://pirsa.org/25120033
MLA
Finch, Eliot. Ringdown Overtones and Black-hole Spectroscopy. Perimeter Institute, Dec. 11, 2025, https://pirsa.org/25120033
BibTex
@misc{ pirsa_PIRSA:25120033,
doi = {10.48660/25120033},
url = {https://pirsa.org/25120033},
author = {Finch, Eliot},
keywords = {Strong Gravity},
language = {en},
title = {Ringdown Overtones and Black-hole Spectroscopy},
publisher = {Perimeter Institute},
year = {2025},
month = {dec},
note = {PIRSA:25120033 see, \url{https://pirsa.org}}
}
Abstract
Overtones are known to improve the performance of fits to the ringdown, both in numerical-relativity simulations and gravitational-wave observations. Although the overtone frequencies are a concrete prediction of general relativity, it remains an open question whether they are excited to the extent that fits to data would suggest. In this talk, after a brief introduction to the ringdown, overtones, and black-hole spectroscopy, I will present work where we take a pragmatic approach and investigate the practical utility of each additional overtone in extracting information from the ringdown. We look at the dependence of the ringdown start time on the number of overtones, and the feasibility of detecting deviations from general relativity in the ringdown frequencies. We suggest that there is no clear highest-excited overtone, but rather the utility of each additional overtone decreases compared to the one before. Finally, we perform Bayesian parameter estimation (as opposed to least-squares fits) to obtain posterior distributions on the overtone amplitudes and phases, allowing us to investigate their correlation structure. Due to strong correlations it becomes increasingly hard to measure individual amplitudes and phases for the highest overtones. However, we find that the joint measurement of overtone amplitudes (i.e., the correlation structure itself) is sensitive to the frequencies and decay times of even the highest overtones, possibly offering an avenue to perform consistency tests with general relativity.