A robust test of general relativity at the galactic scales by combining strong lensing systems and gravitational wave standard sirens
Tonghua Liu, Marek Biesiada, Shuxun Tian, Kai Liao
arXiv:2404.05907v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: The measurement of the parametrized post-Newtonian parameter $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ is a robust test of general relativity (GR). In some modified theories of gravity, $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ may evolve with the redshift and deviate from one at high redshifts. This means that precise constraints on $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ acquired in the solar system experiments could not be sufficient to test such theories and it is necessary to constrain $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$with high precision at high redshifts. However, in many approaches aimed at extragalactic tests of GR, the results might be biased due to entanglement of various factors, such as cosmic curvature, cosmic opacity, and the Hubble constant. Strong lensing systems naturally provide a laboratory to test $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ at galactic scales and high redshifts, but there is degeneracy between measured strength of gravity and cosmic distances in the lensing system. Gravitational waves (GWs) from binary neutron star mergers (standard sirens) provide a direct way to break this degeneracy by providing self-calibrated measurements of the luminosity distance. {We investigate the possibility of estimating $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ by combining well measured strongly lensed systems with GW signals from coalescing neutron stars. Such combination provides a cosmological-model independent, relatively pure and unbiased method for the inference of $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ parameter, avoiding the influence of the above factors and the mass-sheet degeneracy in the lens.} Based on the simulated future 55 lensed quasar systems we demonstrated that the precision of $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ parameter obtained by our method could be of order of $sim 10^{-2}$. One may reasonably expect that our approach will play an increasingly important role in precise testing the validity of general relativity at galactic scales and high redshifts.arXiv:2404.05907v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: The measurement of the parametrized post-Newtonian parameter $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ is a robust test of general relativity (GR). In some modified theories of gravity, $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ may evolve with the redshift and deviate from one at high redshifts. This means that precise constraints on $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ acquired in the solar system experiments could not be sufficient to test such theories and it is necessary to constrain $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$with high precision at high redshifts. However, in many approaches aimed at extragalactic tests of GR, the results might be biased due to entanglement of various factors, such as cosmic curvature, cosmic opacity, and the Hubble constant. Strong lensing systems naturally provide a laboratory to test $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ at galactic scales and high redshifts, but there is degeneracy between measured strength of gravity and cosmic distances in the lensing system. Gravitational waves (GWs) from binary neutron star mergers (standard sirens) provide a direct way to break this degeneracy by providing self-calibrated measurements of the luminosity distance. {We investigate the possibility of estimating $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ by combining well measured strongly lensed systems with GW signals from coalescing neutron stars. Such combination provides a cosmological-model independent, relatively pure and unbiased method for the inference of $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ parameter, avoiding the influence of the above factors and the mass-sheet degeneracy in the lens.} Based on the simulated future 55 lensed quasar systems we demonstrated that the precision of $gamma_{rm{PPN}}$ parameter obtained by our method could be of order of $sim 10^{-2}$. One may reasonably expect that our approach will play an increasingly important role in precise testing the validity of general relativity at galactic scales and high redshifts.