3,019 research outputs found
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
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
Non-equilibrium beta processes in superfluid neutron star cores
The influence of nucleons superfluidity on the beta relaxation time of
degenerate neutron star cores, composed of neutrons, protons and electrons, is
investigated. We numerically calculate the implied reduction factors for both
direct and modified Urca reactions, with isotropic pairing of protons or
anisotropic pairing of neutrons. We find that due to the non-zero value of the
temperature and/or to the vanishing of anisotropic gaps in some directions of
the phase-space, superfluidity does not always completely inhibit beta
relaxation, allowing for some reactions if the superfluid gap amplitude is not
too large in respect to both the typical thermal energy and the chemical
potential mismatch. We even observe that if the ratio between the critical
temperature and the actual temperature is very small, a suprathermal regime is
reached for which superfluidity is almost irrelevant. On the contrary, if the
gap is large enough, the composition of the nuclear matter can stay frozen for
very long durations, unless the departure from beta equilibrium is at least as
important as the gap amplitude. These results are crucial for precise
estimation of the superfluidity effect on the cooling/slowing-down of pulsars
and we provide online subroutines to be implemented in codes for simulating
such evolutions.Comment: 11 pages, 6 Figs., published, minor changes, subroutines can be found
on line at http://luth2.obspm.fr/~etu/villain/Micro/Resolution.htm
Nonlinear r-Modes in Neutron Stars: Instability of an unstable mode
We study the dynamical evolution of a large amplitude r-mode by numerical
simulations. R-modes in neutron stars are unstable growing modes, driven by
gravitational radiation reaction. In these simulations, r-modes of amplitude
unity or above are destroyed by a catastrophic decay: A large amplitude r-mode
gradually leaks energy into other fluid modes, which in turn act nonlinearly
with the r-mode, leading to the onset of the rapid decay. As a result the
r-mode suddenly breaks down into a differentially rotating configuration. The
catastrophic decay does not appear to be related to shock waves at the star's
surface. The limit it imposes on the r-mode amplitude is significantly smaller
than that suggested by previous fully nonlinear numerical simulations.Comment: Published in Phys. Rev. D Rapid Comm. 66, 041303(R) (2002
Testing the Accuracy and Stability of Spectral Methods in Numerical Relativity
The accuracy and stability of the Caltech-Cornell pseudospectral code is
evaluated using the KST representation of the Einstein evolution equations. The
basic "Mexico City Tests" widely adopted by the numerical relativity community
are adapted here for codes based on spectral methods. Exponential convergence
of the spectral code is established, apparently limited only by numerical
roundoff error. A general expression for the growth of errors due to finite
machine precision is derived, and it is shown that this limit is achieved here
for the linear plane-wave test. All of these tests are found to be stable,
except for simulations of high amplitude gauge waves with nontrivial shift.Comment: Final version, as published in Phys. Rev. D; 13 pages, 16 figure
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
Nonlinear Development of the Secular Bar-mode Instability in Rotating Neutron Stars
We have modelled the nonlinear development of the secular bar-mode
instability that is driven by gravitational radiation-reaction (GRR) forces in
rotating neutron stars. In the absence of any competing viscous effects, an
initially uniformly rotating, axisymmetric polytropic star with a ratio
of rotational to gravitational potential energy is driven by
GRR forces to a bar-like structure, as predicted by linear theory. The pattern
frequency of the bar slows to nearly zero, that is, the bar becomes almost
stationary as viewed from an inertial frame of reference as GRR removes energy
and angular momentum from the star. In this ``Dedekind-like'' state, rotational
energy is stored as motion of the fluid in highly noncircular orbits inside the
bar. However, in less than 10 dynamical times after its formation, the bar
loses its initially coherent structure as the ordered flow inside the bar is
disrupted by what appears to be a purely hydrodynamical, short-wavelength,
``shearing'' type instability. The gravitational waveforms generated by such an
event are determined, and an estimate of the detectability of these waves is
presented.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, refereed
version, updated, for quicktime movie, see
http://www.phys.lsu.edu/~ou/movie/fmode/new/fmode.b181.om4.2e5.mo
Controlling the growth of constraints in hyperbolic evolution systems
Motivated by the need to control the exponential growth of constraint violations in numerical solutions of the Einstein evolution equations, two methods are studied here for controlling this growth in general hyperbolic evolution systems. The first method adjusts the evolution equations dynamically, by adding multiples of the constraints, in a way designed to minimize this growth. The second method imposes special constraint preserving boundary conditions on the incoming components of the dynamical fields. The efficacy of these methods is tested by using them to control the growth of constraints in fully dynamical 3D numerical solutions of a particular representation of the Maxwell equations that is subject to constraint violations. The constraint preserving boundary conditions are found to be much more effective than active constraint control in the case of this Maxwell system
Toward stable 3D numerical evolutions of black-hole spacetimes
Three dimensional (3D) numerical evolutions of static black holes with
excision are presented. These evolutions extend to about 8000M, where M is the
mass of the black hole. This degree of stability is achieved by using
growth-rate estimates to guide the fine tuning of the parameters in a
multi-parameter family of symmetric hyperbolic representations of the Einstein
evolution equations. These evolutions were performed using a fixed gauge in
order to separate the intrinsic stability of the evolution equations from the
effects of stability-enhancing gauge choices.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. D. Minor additions to
text for clarification. Added short paragraph about inner boundary dependenc
An Improved Gauge Driver for the Generalized Harmonic Einstein System
A new gauge driver is introduced for the generalized harmonic (GH)
representation of Einstein's equation. This new driver allows a rather general
class of gauge conditions to be implemented in a way that maintains the
hyperbolicity of the combined evolution system. This driver is more stable and
effective, and unlike previous drivers, allows stable evolutions using the
dual-frame evolution technique. Appropriate boundary conditions for this new
gauge driver are constructed, and a new boundary condition for the ``gauge''
components of the spacetime metric in the GH Einstein system is introduced. The
stability and effectiveness of this new gauge driver are demonstrated through
numerical tests, which impose a new damped-wave gauge condition on the
evolutions of single black-hole spacetimes.Comment: v2: final version to be published in PRD; 15 pages, 5 figure
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