7,829 research outputs found
"Are Black Holes in Brans-Dicke Theory precisely the same as in General Relativity?"
We study a three-parameters family of solutions of the Brans-Dicke field
equations. They are static and spherically symmetric. We find the range of
parameters for which this solution represents a black hole different from the
Schwarzschild one. We find a subfamily of solutions which agrees with
experiments and observations in the solar system. We discuss some astrophysical
applications and the consequences on the "no hair" theorems for black holes.Comment: 13pages, Plain Te
Making use of geometrical invariants in black hole collisions
We consider curvature invariants in the context of black hole collision
simulations. In particular, we propose a simple and elegant combination of the
Weyl invariants I and J, the {\sl speciality index} . In the context
of black hole perturbations provides a measure of the size of the
distortions from an ideal Kerr black hole spacetime. Explicit calculations in
well-known examples of axisymmetric black hole collisions demonstrate that this
quantity may serve as a useful tool for predicting in which cases perturbative
dynamics provide an accurate estimate of the radiation waveform and energy.
This makes particularly suited to studying the transition from
nonlinear to linear dynamics and for invariant interpretation of numerical
results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, Revte
Spin-orbit interactions in black-hole binaries
We perform numerical simulations of black-hole binaries to study the exchange
of spin and orbital angular momentum during the last, highly nonlinear, stages
of the coalescence process. To calculate the transfer of angular momentum from
orbital to spin, we start with two quasi-circular configurations, one with
initially non-spinning black holes, the other with corotating black holes. In
both cases the binaries complete almost two orbits before merging. We find
that, during these last orbits, the specific spin (a/m) of each horizon
increases by only 0.012 for the initially non-spinning configuration, and by
only 0.006 for the initially corotating configuration. By contrast, the
corotation value for the specific spin should increase from 0.1 at the initial
proper separation of 10M to 0.33 when the proper separation is 5M. Thus the
spin-orbit coupling is far too weak to tidally lock the binary to a corotating
state during the late-inspiral phase. We also study the converse transfer from
spin into orbital motion. In this case, we start the simulations with parallel,
highly-spinning non-boosted black holes. As the collision proceeds, the system
acquires a non-head-on orbital motion, due to spin-orbit coupling, that leads
to the radiation of angular momentum. We are able to accurately measure the
energy and angular momentum losses and model their dependence on the initial
spins.Comment: This version corrects two typos in Eq (4) and Table I present in the
published versio
Spinning-black-hole binaries: The orbital hang up
We present the first fully-nonlinear numerical study of the dynamics of
highly spinning black-hole binaries. We evolve binaries from quasicircular
orbits (as inferred from Post-Newtonian theory), and find that the last stages
of the orbital motion of black-hole binaries are profoundly affected by their
individual spins. In order to cleanly display its effects, we consider two
equal mass holes with individual spin parameters S/m^2=0.757, both aligned and
anti-aligned with the orbital angular momentum (and compare with the spinless
case), and with an initial orbital period of 125M. We find that the aligned
case completes three orbits and merges significantly after the anti-aligned
case, which completes less than one orbit. The total energy radiated for the
former case is ~7% while for the latter it is only ~2%. The final Kerr hole
remnants have rotation parameters a/M=0.89 and a/M=0.44 respectively, showing
the unlikeliness of creating a maximally rotating black hole out of the merger
of two spinning holes.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, revtex4. New version accepted for publication in
Physical Review D Rapid Communication
The last orbit of binary black holes
We have used our new technique for fully numerical evolutions of orbiting
black-hole binaries without excision to model the last orbit and merger of an
equal-mass black-hole system. We track the trajectories of the individual
apparent horizons and find that the binary completed approximately one and a
third orbits before forming a common horizon. Upon calculating the complete
gravitational radiation waveform, horizon mass, and spin, we find that the
binary radiated 3.2% of its mass and 24% of its angular momentum. The early
part of the waveform, after a relatively short initial burst of spurious
radiation, is oscillatory with increasing amplitude and frequency, as expected
from orbital motion. The waveform then transitions to a typical `plunge'
waveform; i.e. a rapid rise in amplitude followed by quasinormal ringing. The
plunge part of the waveform is remarkably similar to the waveform from the
previously studied `ISCO' configuration. We anticipate that the plunge
waveform, when starting from quasicircular orbits, has a generic shape that is
essentially independent of the initial separation of the binary.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, revtex
Gravitational waves from black hole collisions via an eclectic approach
We present the first results in a new program intended to make the best use
of all available technologies to provide an effective understanding of waves
from inspiralling black hole binaries in time for imminent observations. In
particular, we address the problem of combining the close-limit approximation
describing ringing black holes and full numerical relativity, required for
essentially nonlinear interactions. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our
approach using general methods for a model problem, the head-on collision of
black holes. Our method allows a more direct physical understanding of these
collisions indicating clearly when non-linear methods are important. The
success of this method supports our expectation that this unified approach will
be able to provide astrophysically relevant results for black hole binaries in
time to assist gravitational wave observations.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, Revte
Study of Conformally Flat Initial Data for Highly Spinning Black Holes and their Early Evolutions
We study conformally-flat initial data for an arbitrary number of spinning
black holes with exact analytic solutions to the momentum constraints
constructed from a linear combination of the classical Bowen-York and conformal
Kerr extrinsic curvatures. The solution leading to the largest intrinsic spin,
relative to the ADM mass of the spacetime epsilon_S=S/M^2_{ADM}, is a
superposition with relative weights of Lambda=0.783 for conformal Kerr and
(1-Lambda)=0.217 for Bowen-York. In addition, we measure the spin relative to
the initial horizon mass M_{H_0}, and find that the quantity chi=S/M_{H_0}^2
reaches a maximum of \chi^{max}=0.9856 for Lambda=0.753. After equilibration,
the final black-hole spin should lie in the interval 0.9324<chi_{final}<0.9856.
We perform full numerical evolutions to compute the energy radiated and the
final horizon mass and spin. We find that the black hole settles to a final
spin of chi_{final}^{max}=0.935 when Lambda=0.783. We also study the evolution
of the apparent horizon structure of this "maximal" black hole in detail.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
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