Probing noncommutative gravity with gravitational wave and binary pulsar observations
Noncommutative gravity is a natural method of quantizing spacetime by promoting the spacetime coordinates themselves to operators which do not commute. This approach is motivated from a quantum gravity perspective, as well as from other theoretical considerations. Noncommutative gravity has been tes...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physical review. D 2020-10, Vol.102 (8), Article 084022 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Noncommutative gravity is a natural method of quantizing spacetime by promoting the spacetime coordinates themselves to operators which do not commute. This approach is motivated from a quantum gravity perspective, as well as from other theoretical considerations. Noncommutative gravity has been tested against the binary black hole merger event GW150914. Here, we extend and improve upon such a previous analysis by (i) relaxing an assumption made on the preferred direction due to noncommutativity, (ii) using posterior samples produced by the LIGO/Virgo Collaborations, (iii) consider other gravitational wave events, namely GW151226, GW170608, GW170814 and GW170817, and (iv) considering binary pulsar observations. Using Kepler's law that contains the noncommutative effect at second post-Newtonian order, we derive corrections to the gravitational waveform phase and the pericenter precession. Using the gravitational wave and double pulsar binary observations, we find bounds on a space-time noncommutative tensor theta(0i) in terms of the preferred frame direction with respect to the orientation of each binary. We find that the gravitational wave bounds are stronger than the binary pulsar one by an order of magnitude and the noncommutative tensor normalized by the Planck length and time is constrained to be of order unity. |
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ISSN: | 2470-0010 2470-0029 |
DOI: | 10.1103/PhysRevD.102.084022 |