51,872 research outputs found
The basics of gravitational wave theory
Einstein's special theory of relativity revolutionized physics by teaching us
that space and time are not separate entities, but join as ``spacetime''. His
general theory of relativity further taught us that spacetime is not just a
stage on which dynamics takes place, but is a participant: The field equation
of general relativity connects matter dynamics to the curvature of spacetime.
Curvature is responsible for gravity, carrying us beyond the Newtonian
conception of gravity that had been in place for the previous two and a half
centuries. Much research in gravitation since then has explored and clarified
the consequences of this revolution; the notion of dynamical spacetime is now
firmly established in the toolkit of modern physics. Indeed, this notion is so
well established that we may now contemplate using spacetime as a tool for
other science. One aspect of dynamical spacetime -- its radiative character,
``gravitational radiation'' -- will inaugurate entirely new techniques for
observing violent astrophysical processes. Over the next one hundred years,
much of this subject's excitement will come from learning how to exploit
spacetime as a tool for astronomy. This article is intended as a tutorial in
the basics of gravitational radiation physics.Comment: 49 pages, 3 figures. For special issue of New Journal of Physics,
"Spacetime 100 Years Later", edited by Richard Price and Jorge Pullin. This
version corrects an important error in Eq. (4.23); an erratum is in pres
Using gravitational-wave standard sirens
Gravitational waves (GWs) from supermassive binary black hole (BBH) inspirals
are potentially powerful standard sirens (the GW analog to standard candles)
(Schutz 1986, 2002). Because these systems are well-modeled, the space-based GW
observatory LISA will be able to measure the luminosity distance (but not the
redshift) to some distant massive BBH systems with 1-10% accuracy. This
accuracy is largely limited by pointing error: GW sources generally are poorly
localized on the sky. Localizing the binary independently (e.g., through
association with an electromagnetic counterpart) greatly reduces this
positional error. An electromagnetic counterpart may also allow determination
of the event's redshift. In this case, BBH coalescence would constitute an
extremely precise (better than 1%) standard candle visible to high redshift. In
practice, gravitational lensing degrades this precision, though the candle
remains precise enough to provide useful information about the
distance-redshift relation. Even if very rare, these GW standard sirens would
complement, and increase confidence in, other standard candles.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. ApJ, in pres
Low-speed wind tunnel performance of high-speed counterrotation propellers at angle-of-attack
The low-speed aerodynamic performance characteristics of two advanced counterrotation pusher-propeller configurations with cruise design Mach numbers of 0.72 were investigated in the NASA Lewis 9- by 15-Foot Low-Speed Wind Tunnel. The tests were conducted at Mach number 0.20, which is representative of the aircraft take-off/landing flight regime. The investigation determined the effect of nonuniform inflow on the propeller performance characteristics for several blade angle settings and a range of rotational speeds. The inflow was varied by yawing the propeller model to angle-of-attack by as much as plus or minus 16 degrees and by installing on the counterrotation propeller test rig near the propeller rotors a model simulator of an aircraft engine support pylon and fuselage. The results of the investigation indicated that the low-speed performance of the counterrotation propeller configurations near the take-off target operating points were reasonable and were fairly insensitive to changes in model angle-of-attack without the aircraft pylon/fuselage simulators installed on the propeller test rig. When the aircraft pylon/fuselage simulators were installed, small changes in propeller performance were seen at zero angle-of-attack, but fairly large changes in total power coefficient and very large changes of aft-to-forward-rotor torque ratio were produced when the propeller model was taken to angle-of-attack. The propeller net efficiency, though, was fairly insensitive to any changes in the propeller flowfield conditions near the take-off target operating points
Tidal stability of giant molecular clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Star formation does not occur until the onset of gravitational collapse
inside giant molecular clouds. However, the conditions that initiate cloud
collapse and regulate the star formation process remain poorly understood.
Local processes such as turbulence and magnetic fields can act to promote or
prevent collapse. On larger scales, the galactic potential can also influence
cloud stability and is traditionally assessed by the tidal and shear effects.
In this paper, we examine the stability of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) against shear and the galactic tide using CO data
from the Magellanic Mopra Assessment (MAGMA) and rotation curve data from the
literature. We calculate the tidal acceleration experienced by individual GMCs
and determine the minimum cloud mass required for tidal stability. We also
calculate the shear parameter, which is a measure of a clouds susceptibility to
disruption via shearing forces in the galactic disk. We examine whether there
are correlations between the properties and star forming activity of GMCs and
their stability against shear and tidal disruption. We find that the GMCs are
in approximate tidal balance in the LMC, and that shear is unlikely to affect
their further evolution. GMCs with masses close to the minimal stable mass
against tidal disruption are not unusual in terms of their mass, location, or
CO brightness, but we note that GMCs with large velocity dispersion tend to be
more sensitive to tidal instability. We also note that GMCs with smaller radii,
which represent the majority of our sample, tend to more strongly resist tidal
and shear disruption. Our results demonstrate that star formation in the LMC is
not inhibited by to tidal or shear instability.Comment: 18 pages, 10 Figures, Accepted in PAS
Extreme Mass Ratio Binary: Radiation reaction and gravitational waveform
For a successful detection of gravitational waves by LISA, it is essential to
construct theoretical waveforms in a reliable manner. We discuss gravitational
waves from an extreme mass ratio binary system which is expected to be a
promising target of the LISA project.
The extreme mass ratio binary is a binary system of a supermassive black hole
and a stellar mass compact object. As the supermassive black hole dominates the
gravitational field of the system, we suppose that the system might be well
approximated by a metric perturbation of a Kerr black hole. We discuss a recent
theoretical progress in calculating the waveforms from such a system.Comment: Classical and Quantum Gravity 22 (2005) S375-S379, Proceedings for
5th International LISA Symposiu
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