9 research outputs found
The Polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background Due to Primordial Gravitational Waves
We review current observational constraints on the polarization of the Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB), with a particular emphasis on detecting the
signature of primordial gravitational waves. We present an analytic solution to
the Polanarev approximation for CMB polarization produced by primordial
gravitational waves. This simplifies the calculation of the curl, or B-mode
power spectrum associated with gravitational waves during the epoch of
cosmological inflation. We compare our analytic method to existing numerical
methods and also make predictions for the sensitivity of upcoming CMB
polarization observations to the inflationary gravitational wave background. We
show that upcoming experiments should be able either detect the relic
gravitational wave background or completely rule out whole classes of
inflationary models.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, review published in IJMP
Primordial black hole formation in the radiative era: investigation of the critical nature of the collapse
Following on after two previous papers discussing the formation of primordial
black holes in the early universe, we present here results from an in-depth
investigation of the extent to which primordial black hole formation in the
radiative era can be considered as an example of the critical collapse
phenomenon. We focus on initial supra-horizon-scale perturbations of a type
which could have come from inflation, with only a growing component and no
decaying component. In order to study perturbations with amplitudes extremely
close to the supposed critical limit, we have modified our previous computer
code with the introduction of an adaptive mesh refinement scheme. This has
allowed us to follow black hole formation from perturbations whose amplitudes
are up to eight orders of magnitude closer to the threshold than we could do
before. We find that scaling-law behaviour continues down to the smallest black
hole masses that we are able to follow and we see no evidence of shock
production such as has been reported in some previous studies and which led
there to a breaking of the scaling-law behaviour at small black-hole masses. We
attribute this difference to the different initial conditions used. In addition
to the scaling law, we also present other features of the results which are
characteristic of critical collapse in this context.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, the present version is updated with some changes
and two new appendix. Accepted for pubblication in Classical and Quantum
Gravit
Propagation of Light in the Field of Stationary and Radiative Gravitational Multipoles
Extremely high precision of near-future radio/optical interferometric
observatories like SKA, Gaia, SIM and the unparalleled sensitivity of LIGO/LISA
gravitational-wave detectors demands more deep theoretical treatment of
relativistic effects in the propagation of electromagnetic signals through
variable gravitational fields of the solar system, oscillating and precessing
neutron stars, coalescing binary systems, exploding supernova, and colliding
galaxies. Especially important for future gravitational-wave observatories is
the problem of propagation of light rays in the field of multipolar
gravitational waves emitted by a localized source of gravitational radiation.
Present paper suggests physically-adequate and consistent mathematical solution
of this problem in the first post-Minkowskian approximation of General
Relativity which accounts for all time-dependent multipole moments of an
isolated astronomical system.Comment: 36 pages, no figure
The tidal disruption rate in dense galactic cusps containing a supermassive binary black hole
We consider the problem of tidal disruption of stars in the centre of a
galaxy containing a supermassive binary black hole with unequal masses. We
assume that over the separation distance between the black holes the
gravitational potential is dominated by the more massive black hole. Also, we
assume that the number density of stars is concentric with the primary black
hole and has a power law cusp.We show that the bulk of stars with a small
angular-momentum component normal to the black hole binary orbit can reach a
small value of total angular momentum through secular evolution in the
gravitational field of the binary, and hence they can be tidally disrupted.
This effect is analogous to the so-called Kozai effect (Kozai, 1962, Lidov,
1961,1962) well known in celestial mechanics. We develop an analytical theory
of secular evolution of the stellar orbits and calculate the rate of tidal
disruption. We confront our analytical theory with a simple numerical model and
find very good agreement.
Our results show that for primary black-hole mass \sim
10^{6}-10^{7}M_{\odot}, the black- hole mass ratio q > 10^{-2}, cusp size \sim
1pc, the tidal disruption rate can be as large as \sim 10^{-2}-1M_{\odot}/yr.
This is at least 10^{2}-10^{4} times larger than estimated for the case of a
single supermassive black hole. The duration of the phase of enhanced tidal
disruption is determined by the dynamical friction time scale, and it is rather
short: \sim 10^{5}yr. The dependence of the tidal disruption rate on the mass
ratio, as well as on the size of the cusp, is also discussed.Comment: This version has been published in MNRA
Loss cone: past, present and future
The capture and subsequent in--spiral of compact stellar remnants by central
massive black holes, is one of the more interesting likely sources of
gravitational radiation detectable by LISA. The relevant stellar population
includes stellar mass black holes, and possibly intermediate mass black holes,
generally on initially eccentric orbits. Predicted detectable rates of capture
are highly uncertain, but may be high enough that source confusion is an issue.
Foreground events with relatively high signal-to-noise ratio may provide
important tests of general relativity. I review the rate estimates in the
literature, and the apparent discrepancy between different authors' estimates,
and discuss some of the relevant uncertainties and physical processes. The
white dwarf mergers rate are uncertain by a factor of few; the neutron star
merger rate is completely uncertain and likely to be small; the black hole
merger rate is likely to be dominant for detectable mergers and is uncertain by
at least two orders of magnitude, largely due to unknown physical conditions
and processes. The primary difference in rate estimates is due to different
initial conditions and less directly due to different estimates of key physical
processes, assumed in different model scenarios for in-spiral and capture.Comment: 7 pages, revtex twocolumn, Special LISA Issue Classical and Quantum
Gravity in pres