77 research outputs found
Reconstruction of inhomogeneous metric perturbations and electromagnetic four-potential in Kerr spacetime
We present a procedure that allows the construction of the metric
perturbations and electromagnetic four-potential, for gravitational and
electromagnetic perturbations produced by sources in Kerr spacetime. This may
include, for example, the perturbations produced by a point particle or an
extended object moving in orbit around a Kerr black hole. The construction is
carried out in the frequency domain. Previously, Chrzanowski derived the vacuum
metric perturbations and electromagnetic four-potential by applying a
differential operator to a certain potential . Here we construct
for inhomogeneous perturbations, thereby allowing the application of
Chrzanowski's method. We address this problem in two stages: First, for vacuum
perturbations (i.e. pure gravitational or electromagnetic waves), we construct
the potential from the modes of the Weyl scalars or .
Second, for perturbations produced by sources, we express in terms of
the mode functions of the source, i.e. the energy-momentum tensor or the electromagnetic current vector .Comment: 20 pages; few typos corrected and minor modifications made; accepted
to Phys. Rev.
Toward Making the Constraint Hypersurface an Attractor in Free Evolution
There is an abundance of empirical evidence in the numerical relativity
literature that the form in which the Einstein evolution equations are written
plays a significant role in the lifetime of numerical simulations. This paper
attempts to present a consistent framework for modifying any system of
evolution equations by adding terms that push the evolution toward the
constraint hypersurface. The method is, in principle, applicable to any system
of partial differential equations which can be divided into evolution equations
and constraints, although it is only demonstrated here through an application
to the Maxwell equations.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. Uses REVTeX
Approximating the inspiral of test bodies into Kerr black holes
We present a new approximate method for constructing gravitational radiation
driven inspirals of test-bodies orbiting Kerr black holes. Such orbits can be
fully described by a semi-latus rectum , an eccentricity , and an
inclination angle ; or, by an energy , an angular momentum component
, and a third constant . Our scheme uses expressions that are exact
(within an adiabatic approximation) for the rates of change (,
, ) as linear combinations of the fluxes (,
, ), but uses quadrupole-order formulae for these fluxes.
This scheme thus encodes the exact orbital dynamics, augmenting it with
approximate radiation reaction. Comparing inspiral trajectories, we find that
this approximation agrees well with numerical results for the special cases of
eccentric equatorial and circular inclined orbits, far more accurate than
corresponding weak-field formulae for (, , ). We
use this technique to study the inspiral of a test-body in inclined, eccentric
Kerr orbits. Our results should be useful tools for constructing approximate
waveforms that can be used to study data analysis problems for the future LISA
gravitational-wave observatory, in lieu of waveforms from more rigorous
techniques that are currently under development.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Quasinormal Modes Beyond Kerr
The quasinormal modes (QNMs) of a black hole spacetime are the free, decaying
oscillations of the spacetime, and are well understood in the case of Kerr
black holes. We discuss a method for computing the QNMs of spacetimes which are
slightly deformed from Kerr. We mention two example applications: the
parametric, turbulent instability of scalar fields on a background which
includes a gravitational QNM, and the shifts to the QNM frequencies of Kerr
when the black hole is weakly charged. This method may be of use in studies of
black holes which are deformed by external fields or are solutions to
alternative theories of gravity.Comment: Proceedings of the Sant Cugat Forum on Astrophysics (2014). Session
on 'Gravitational Wave Astrophysics.' 7 page
Non-vanishing Magnetic Flux through the Slightly-charged Kerr Black Hole
In association with the Blanford-Znajek mechanism for rotational energy
extraction from Kerr black holes, it is of some interest to explore how much of
magnetic flux can actually penetrate the horizon at least in idealized
situations. For completely uncharged Kerr hole case, it has been known for some
time that the magnetic flux gets entirely expelled when the hole is
maximally-rotating. In the mean time, it is known that when the rotating hole
is immersed in an originally uniform magnetic field surrounded by an ionized
interstellar medium (plasma), which is a more realistic situation, the hole
accretes certain amount of electric charge. In the present work, it is
demonstrated that as a result of this accretion charge small enough not to
disturb the geometry, the magnetic flux through this slightly charged Kerr hole
depends not only on the hole's angular momentum but on the hole's charge as
well such that it never vanishes for any value of the hole's angular momentum.Comment: 33pages, 1 figure, Revtex, some comments added, typos correcte
Rotating black hole orbit functionals in the frequency domain
In many astrophysical problems, it is important to understand the behavior of
functions that come from rotating (Kerr) black hole orbits. It can be
particularly useful to work with the frequency domain representation of those
functions, in order to bring out their harmonic dependence upon the fundamental
orbital frequencies of Kerr black holes. Although, as has recently been shown
by W. Schmidt, such a frequency domain representation must exist, the coupled
nature of a black hole orbit's and motions makes it difficult to
construct such a representation in practice. Combining Schmidt's description
with a clever choice of timelike coordinate suggested by Y. Mino, we have
developed a simple procedure that sidesteps this difficulty. One first Fourier
expands all quantities using Mino's time coordinate . In particular,
the observer's time is decomposed with . The frequency domain
description is then built from the -Fourier expansion and the
expansion of . We have found this procedure to be quite simple to implement,
and to be applicable to a wide class of functionals. We test the procedure
using a simple test function, and then apply it in a particularly interesting
case, the Weyl curvature scalar used in black hole perturbation
theory.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to Phys Rev D. New version gives a
vastly improved algorithm due to Drasco for computing the Fourier transforms.
Drasco has been added as an author. Also fixed some references and
exterminated a small herd of typos; final published versio
Kerr black hole quasinormal frequencies
Black-hole quasinormal modes (QNM) have been the subject of much recent
attention, with the hope that these oscillation frequencies may shed some light
on the elusive theory of quantum gravity. We compare numerical results for the
QNM spectrum of the (rotating) Kerr black hole with an {\it exact} formula
Re, which is based on Bohr's correspondence
principle. We find a close agreement between the two. Possible implications of
this result to the area spectrum of quantum black holes are discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure
Black String Perturbations in RS1 Model
We present a general formalism for black string perturbations in
Randall-Sundrum 1 model (RS1). First, we derive the master equation for the
electric part of the Weyl tensor . Solving the master equation
using the gradient expansion method, we give the effective Teukolsky equation
on the brane at low energy. It is useful to estimate gravitational waves
emitted by perturbed rotating black strings. We also argue the effect of the
Gregory-Laflamme instability on the brane using our formalism.Comment: 14 pages, Based on a talk presented at ACRGR4, the 4th Australasian
Conference on General Relativity and Gravitation, Monash University,
Melbourne, January 2004. To appear in the proceedings, in General Relativity
and Gravitatio
On the Weyl transverse frames in type I spacetimes
We apply a covariant and generic procedure to obtain explicit expressions of
the transverse frames that a type I spacetime admits in terms of an arbitrary
initial frame. We also present a simple and general algorithm to obtain the
Weyl scalars , and associated with these
transverse frames. In both cases it is only necessary to choose a particular
root of a cubic expression.Comment: 12 pages, submitted to Gen. Rel. Grav. (6-3-2004
Static Hopfions in the extended Skyrme-Faddeev model
We construct static soliton solutions with non-zero Hopf topological charges
to a theory which is an extension of the Skyrme-Faddeev model by the addition
of a further quartic term in derivatives. We use an axially symmetric ansatz
based on toroidal coordinates, and solve the resulting two coupled non-linear
partial differential equations in two variables by a successive over-relaxation
(SOR) method. We construct numerical solutions with Hopf charge up to four, and
calculate their analytical behavior in some limiting cases. The solutions
present an interesting behavior under the changes of a special combination of
the coupling constants of the quartic terms. Their energies and sizes tend to
zero as that combination approaches a particular special value. We calculate
the equivalent of the Vakulenko and Kapitanskii energy bound for the theory and
find that it vanishes at that same special value of the coupling constants. In
addition, the model presents an integrable sector with an infinite number of
local conserved currents which apparently are not related to symmetries of the
action. In the intersection of those two special sectors the theory possesses
exact vortex solutions (static and time dependent) which were constructed in a
previous paper by one of the authors. It is believed that such model describes
some aspects of the low energy limit of the pure SU(2) Yang-Mills theory, and
our results may be important in identifying important structures in that strong
coupling regime.Comment: 22 pages, 42 figures, minor correction
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