3,869 research outputs found
Gravitational radiation from the r-mode instability
The instability in the r-modes of rotating neutron stars can (in principle)
emit substantial amounts of gravitational radiation (GR) which might be
detectable by LIGO and similar detectors. Estimates are given here of the
detectability of this GR based the non-linear simulations of the r-mode
instability by Lindblom, Tohline and Vallisneri. The burst of GR produced by
the instability in the rapidly rotating 1.4 solar mass neutron star in this
simulation is fairly monochromatic with frequency near 960 Hz and duration
about 100 s. A simple analytical expression is derived here for the optimal S/N
for detecting the GR from this type of source. For an object located at a
distance of 20 Mpc we estimate the optimal S/N to be in the range 1.2 to about
12.0 depending on the LIGO II configuration.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Effect of hyperon bulk viscosity on neutron-star r-modes
Neutron stars are expected to contain a significant number of hyperons in
addition to protons and neutrons in the highest density portions of their
cores. Following the work of Jones, we calculate the coefficient of bulk
viscosity due to nonleptonic weak interactions involving hyperons in
neutron-star cores, including new relativistic and superfluid effects. We
evaluate the influence of this new bulk viscosity on the gravitational
radiation driven instability in the r-modes. We find that the instability is
completely suppressed in stars with cores cooler than a few times 10^9 K, but
that stars rotating more rapidly than 10-30% of maximum are unstable for
temperatures around 10^10 K. Since neutron-star cores are expected to cool to a
few times 10^9 K within seconds (much shorter than the r-mode instability
growth time) due to direct Urca processes, we conclude that the gravitational
radiation instability will be suppressed in young neutron stars before it can
significantly change the angular momentum of the star.Comment: final PRD version, minor typos etc correcte
Improved Time-Domain Accuracy Standards for Model Gravitational Waveforms
Model gravitational waveforms must be accurate enough to be useful for
detection of signals and measurement of their parameters, so appropriate
accuracy standards are needed. Yet these standards should not be unnecessarily
restrictive, making them impractical for the numerical and analytical modelers
to meet. The work of Lindblom, Owen, and Brown [Phys. Rev. D 78, 124020 (2008)]
is extended by deriving new waveform accuracy standards which are significantly
less restrictive while still ensuring the quality needed for gravitational-wave
data analysis. These new standards are formulated as bounds on certain norms of
the time-domain waveform errors, which makes it possible to enforce them in
situations where frequency-domain errors may be difficult or impossible to
estimate reliably. These standards are less restrictive by about a factor of 20
than the previously published time-domain standards for detection, and up to a
factor of 60 for measurement. These new standards should therefore be much
easier to use effectively.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Model waveform accuracy standards for gravitational wave data analysis
Model waveforms are used in gravitational wave data analysis to detect and then to measure the properties of a source by matching the model waveforms to the signal from a detector. This paper derives accuracy standards for model waveforms which are sufficient to ensure that these data analysis applications are capable of extracting the full scientific content of the data, but without demanding excessive accuracy that would place undue burdens on the model waveform simulation community. These accuracy standards are intended primarily for broadband model waveforms produced by numerical simulations, but the standards are quite general and apply equally to such waveforms produced by analytical or hybrid analytical-numerical methods
Second-order rotational effects on the r-modes of neutron stars
Techniques are developed here for evaluating the r-modes of rotating neutron
stars through second order in the angular velocity of the star. Second-order
corrections to the frequencies and eigenfunctions for these modes are evaluated
for neutron star models. The second-order eigenfunctions for these modes are
determined here by solving an unusual inhomogeneous hyperbolic boundary-value
problem. The numerical techniques developed to solve this unusual problem are
somewhat non-standard and may well be of interest beyond the particular
application here. The bulk-viscosity coupling to the r-modes, which appears
first at second order, is evaluated. The bulk-viscosity timescales are found
here to be longer than previous estimates for normal neutron stars, but shorter
than previous estimates for strange stars. These new timescales do not
substantially affect the current picture of the gravitational radiation driven
instability of the r-modes either for neutron stars or for strange stars.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, revte
Generalized r-Modes of the Maclaurin Spheroids
Analytical solutions are presented for a class of generalized r-modes of
rigidly rotating uniform density stars---the Maclaurin spheroids---with
arbitrary values of the angular velocity. Our analysis is based on the work of
Bryan; however, we derive the solutions using slightly different coordinates
that give purely real representations of the r-modes. The class of generalized
r-modes is much larger than the previously studied `classical' r-modes. In
particular, for each l and m we find l-m (or l-1 for the m=0 case) distinct
r-modes. Many of these previously unstudied r-modes (about 30% of those
examined) are subject to a secular instability driven by gravitational
radiation. The eigenfunctions of the `classical' r-modes, the l=m+1 case here,
are found to have particularly simple analytical representations. These r-modes
provide an interesting mathematical example of solutions to a hyperbolic
eigenvalue problem.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures; minor changes and additions as will appear in
the version to be published in Physical Review D, January 199
Gravitational Radiation Instability in Hot Young Neutron Stars
We show that gravitational radiation drives an instability in hot young
rapidly rotating neutron stars. This instability occurs primarily in the l=2
r-mode and will carry away most of the angular momentum of a rapidly rotating
star by gravitational radiation. On the timescale needed to cool a young
neutron star to about T=10^9 K (about one year) this instability can reduce the
rotation rate of a rapidly rotating star to about 0.076\Omega_K, where \Omega_K
is the Keplerian angular velocity where mass shedding occurs. In older colder
neutron stars this instability is suppressed by viscous effects, allowing older
stars to be spun up by accretion to larger angular velocities.Comment: 4 Pages, 2 Figure
Relativistic Stellar Pulsations With Near-Zone Boundary Conditions
A new method is presented here for evaluating approximately the pulsation
modes of relativistic stellar models. This approximation relies on the fact
that gravitational radiation influences these modes only on timescales that are
much longer than the basic hydrodynamic timescale of the system. This makes it
possible to impose the boundary conditions on the gravitational potentials at
the surface of the star rather than in the asymptotic wave zone of the
gravitational field. This approximation is tested here by predicting the
frequencies of the outgoing non-radial hydrodynamic modes of non-rotating
stars. The real parts of the frequencies are determined with an accuracy that
is better than our knowledge of the exact frequencies (about 0.01%) except in
the most relativistic models where it decreases to about 0.1%. The imaginary
parts of the frequencies are determined with an accuracy of approximately M/R,
where M is the mass and R is the radius of the star in question.Comment: 10 pages (REVTeX 3.1), 5 figs., 1 table, fixed minor typos, published
in Phys. Rev. D 56, 2118 (1997
Axial instability of rotating relativistic stars
Perturbations of rotating relativistic stars can be classified by their
behavior under parity. For axial perturbations (r-modes), initial data with
negative canonical energy is found with angular dependence for all
values of and for arbitrarily slow rotation. This implies instability
(or marginal stability) of such perturbations for rotating perfect fluids. This
low -instability is strikingly different from the instability to polar
perturbations, which sets in first for large values of . The timescale for
the axial instability appears, for small angular velocity , to be
proportional to a high power of . As in the case of polar modes,
viscosity will again presumably enforce stability except for hot, rapidly
rotating neutron stars. This work complements Andersson's numerical
investigation of axial modes in slowly rotating stars.Comment: Latex, 18 pages. Equations 84 and 85 are corrected. Discussion of
timescales is corrected and update
Solving Einstein's Equations With Dual Coordinate Frames
A method is introduced for solving Einstein's equations using two distinct
coordinate systems. The coordinate basis vectors associated with one system are
used to project out components of the metric and other fields, in analogy with
the way fields are projected onto an orthonormal tetrad basis. These field
components are then determined as functions of a second independent coordinate
system. The transformation to the second coordinate system can be thought of as
a mapping from the original ``inertial'' coordinate system to the computational
domain. This dual-coordinate method is used to perform stable numerical
evolutions of a black-hole spacetime using the generalized harmonic form of
Einstein's equations in coordinates that rotate with respect to the inertial
frame at infinity; such evolutions are found to be generically unstable using a
single rotating coordinate frame. The dual-coordinate method is also used here
to evolve binary black-hole spacetimes for several orbits. The great
flexibility of this method allows comoving coordinates to be adjusted with a
feedback control system that keeps the excision boundaries of the holes within
their respective apparent horizons.Comment: Updated to agree with published versio
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