Gravitational-wave spectroscopy of massive black holes with the space interferometer LISA

Abstract
Newly formed black holes are expected to emit characteristic radiation in the form of quasinormal modes, called ringdown waves, with discrete frequencies. LISA should be able to detect the ringdown waves emitted by oscillating supermassive black holes throughout the observable Universe. We develop a multimode formalism, applicable to any interferometric detectors, for detecting ringdown signals, for estimating black-hole parameters from those signals, and for testing the no-hair theorem of general relativity. Focusing on LISA, we use current models of its sensitivity to compute the expected signal-to-noise ratio for ringdown events, the relative parameter estimation accuracy, and the resolvability of different modes. We also discuss the extent to which uncertainties on physical parameters, such as the black-hole spin and the energy emitted in each mode, will affect our ability to do black-hole spectroscopy.