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The University of Southampton
STAG Research Centre

Gravity seminar - Gregorio Carullo Seminar

Time:
14:00
Date:
8 January 2026
Venue:
Building 54, room 10037

For more information regarding this seminar, please email Jonathan Thompson at J.E.Thompson@soton.ac.uk .

Event details

Title: Numerically solved, yet understood? Recent advancements in the two-body problem

Abstract: The study of black holes' resonant excitation and their subsequent relaxation ("Black Hole Spectroscopy") is a fundamental tool to observationally investigate gravity in its dynamical regime. Recently, the unprecedented loudness of the gravitational wave signal GW250114 allowed us to exploit spectroscopic techniques to achieve the first accurate verification of several long-standing predictions of general relativity, including the Kerr nature of the remnant. The signal generation mechanism, namely the end state of the gravitational two-body problem, has been numerically solved twenty years ago. However, despite the striking simplicity of black holes, and decades of developments in classical perturbation theory, a first-principles understanding of the dynamical stage in which two black holes fuse together (the "merger" regime), is still lacking. Such ignorance prevents more exciting observational explorations, and the construction of signal models in richer scenarios. In this seminar I will detail recent advancements in this direction, and their potential to enhance our understanding of gravity, searches for new physics, and to harvest the full potential of next-generation detectors in achieving high-precision measurements.

Speaker information

Gregorio Carullo (Birmingham)

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