519 research outputs found
Stabilization by modification of the Lagrangian
In order to reduce the error growth during a numerical integration, a method of stabilization of the differential equations of the Keplerian motion is offered. It is characterized by the use of the eccentric anomaly as an independent variable in such a way that the time transformation is given by a generalized Lagrange formalism. The control terms in the equations of motion obtained by this modified Lagrangian give immediately a completely Liapunov-stable set of differential equations. In contrast to other publications, here the equation of time integration is modified by a control term which leads to an integral which defined the time element for the perturbed Keplerian motion
Radiation of Angular Momentum by Neutrinos from Merged Binary Neutron Stars
We study neutrino emission from the remnant of an inspiraling binary neutron
star following coalescence. The mass of the merged remnant is likely to exceed
the stability limit of a cold, rotating neutron star. However, the angular
momentum of the remnant may also approach or even exceed the Kerr limit, J/M^2
= 1, so that total collapse may not be possible unless some angular momentum is
dissipated. We find that neutrino emission is very inefficient in decreasing
the angular momentum of these merged objects and may even lead to a small
increase in J/M^2. We illustrate these findings with a post-Newtonian,
ellipsoidal model calculation. Simple arguments suggest that the remnant may
form a bar mode instability on a timescale similar to or shorter than the
neutrino emission timescale, in which case the evolution of the remnant will be
dominated by the emission of gravitational waves.Comment: 12 pages AASTeX, 2 figures, to appear in Ap
General relativistic hydrodynamics in curvilinear coordinates
In this paper we report on what we believe is the first successful
implementation of relativistic hydrodynamics, coupled to dynamical spacetimes,
in spherical polar coordinates without symmetry assumptions. We employ a
high-resolution shock-capturing scheme, which requires that the equations be
cast in flux-conservative form. One example of such a form is the :Valencia"
formulation, which has been adopted in numerous applications, in particular in
Cartesian coordinates. Here we generalize this formulation to allow for a
reference-metric approach, which provides a natural framework for calculations
in curvilinear coordinates. In spherical polar coordinates, for example, it
allows for an analytical treatment of the singular r and sin(\theta) terms that
appear in the equations. We experiment with different versions of our
generalized Valencia formulation in numerical implementations of relativistic
hydrodynamics for both fixed and dynamical spacetimes. We consider a number of
different tests -- non-rotating and rotating relativistic stars, as well as
gravitational collapse to a black hole -- to demonstrate that our formulation
provides a promising approach to performing fully relativistic astrophysics
simulations in spherical polar coordinates.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, version to be published in PR
Numerical Relativity in Spherical Polar Coordinates: Off-center Simulations
We have recently presented a new approach for numerical relativity
simulations in spherical polar coordinates, both for vacuum and for
relativistic hydrodynamics. Our approach is based on a reference-metric
formulation of the BSSN equations, a factoring of all tensor components, as
well as a partially implicit Runge-Kutta method, and does not rely on a
regularization of the equations, nor does it make any assumptions about the
symmetry across the origin. In order to demonstrate this feature we present
here several off-centered simulations, including simulations of single black
holes and neutron stars whose center is placed away from the origin of the
coordinate system, as well as the asymmetric head-on collision of two black
holes. We also revisit our implementation of relativistic hydrodynamics and
demonstrate that a reference-metric formulation of hydrodynamics together with
a factoring of all tensor components avoids problems related to the coordinate
singularities at the origin and on the axes. As a particularly demanding test
we present results for a shock wave propagating through the origin of the
spherical polar coordinate system.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures; matches version published in PR
Trumpet Slices in Kerr Spacetimes
We introduce a new time-independent family of analytical coordinate systems
for the Kerr spacetime representing rotating black holes. We also propose a
(2+1)+1 formalism for the characterization of trumpet geometries. Applying this
formalism to our new family of coordinate systems we identify, for the first
time, analytical and stationary trumpet slices for general rotating black
holes, even for charged black holes in the presence of a cosmological constant.
We present results for metric functions in this slicing and analyze the
geometry of the rotating trumpet surface.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; version published in PR
Gravitational Wavetrains in the Quasi-Equilibrium Approximation: A Model Problem in Scalar Gravitation
A quasi-equilibrium (QE) computational scheme was recently developed in
general relativity to calculate the complete gravitational wavetrain emitted
during the inspiral phase of compact binaries. The QE method exploits the fact
that the the gravitational radiation inspiral timescale is much longer than the
orbital period everywhere outside the ISCO. Here we demonstrate the validity
and advantages of the QE scheme by solving a model problem in relativistic
scalar gravitation theory. By adopting scalar gravitation, we are able to
numerically track without approximation the damping of a simple, quasi-periodic
radiating system (an oscillating spherical matter shell) to final equilibrium,
and then use the exact numerical results to calibrate the QE approximation
method. In particular, we calculate the emitted gravitational wavetrain three
different ways: by integrating the exact coupled dynamical field and matter
equations, by using the scalar-wave monopole approximation formula
(corresponding to the quadrupole formula in general relativity), and by
adopting the QE scheme. We find that the monopole formula works well for weak
field cases, but fails when the fields become even moderately strong. By
contrast, the QE scheme remains quite reliable for moderately strong fields,
and begins to breakdown only for ultra-strong fields. The QE scheme thus
provides a promising technique to construct the complete wavetrain from binary
inspiral outside the ISCO, where the gravitational fields are strong, but where
the computational resources required to follow the system for more than a few
orbits by direct numerical integration of the exact equations are prohibitive.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure
Computing the Complete Gravitational Wavetrain from Relativistic Binary Inspiral
We present a new method for generating the nonlinear gravitational wavetrain
from the late inspiral (pre-coalescence) phase of a binary neutron star system
by means of a numerical evolution calculation in full general relativity. In a
prototype calculation, we produce 214 wave cycles from corotating polytropes,
representing the final part of the inspiral phase prior to reaching the ISCO.
Our method is based on the inequality that the orbital decay timescale due to
gravitational radiation is much longer than an orbital period and the
approximation that gravitational radiation has little effect on the structure
of the stars. We employ quasi-equilibrium sequences of binaries in circular
orbit for the matter source in our field evolution code. We compute the
gravity-wave energy flux, and, from this, the inspiral rate, at a discrete set
of binary separations. From these data, we construct the gravitational waveform
as a continuous wavetrain. Finally, we discuss the limitations of our current
calculation, planned improvements, and potential applications of our method to
other inspiral scenarios.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Analytical Tendex and Vortex Fields for Perturbative Black Hole Initial Data
Tendex and vortex fields, defined by the eigenvectors and eigenvalues of the
electric and magnetic parts of the Weyl curvature tensor, form the basis of a
recently developed approach to visualizing spacetime curvature. In particular,
this method has been proposed as a tool for interpreting results from numerical
binary black hole simulations, providing a deeper insight into the physical
processes governing the merger of black holes and the emission of gravitational
radiation. Here we apply this approach to approximate but analytical initial
data for both single boosted and binary black holes. These perturbative data
become exact in the limit of small boost or large binary separation. We hope
that these calculations will provide additional insight into the properties of
tendex and vortex fields, and will form a useful test for future numerical
calculations.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, submitted to PR
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