1,369 research outputs found
Superkicks in ultrarelativistic encounters of spinning black holes
We study ultrarelativistic encounters of two spinning, equal-mass black holes
through simulations in full numerical relativity. Two initial data sequences
are studied in detail: one that leads to scattering and one that leads to a
grazing collision and merger. In all cases, the initial black hole spins lie in
the orbital plane, a configuration that leads to the so-called "superkicks". In
astrophysical, quasicircular inspirals, such kicks can be as large as ~3,000
km/s; here, we find configurations that exceed ~15,000 km/s. We find that the
maximum recoil is to a good approximation proportional to the total amount of
energy radiated in gravitational waves, but largely independent of whether a
merger occurs or not. This shows that the mechanism predominantly responsible
for the superkick is not related to merger dynamics. Rather, a consistent
explanation is that the "bobbing" motion of the orbit causes an asymmetric
beaming of the radiation produced by the in-plane orbital motion of the binary,
and the net asymmetry is balanced by a recoil. We use our results to formulate
some conjectures on the ultimate kick achievable in any black hole encounter.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
The BSSN formulation is a partially constrained evolution system
Relativistic simulations in 3+1 dimensions typically monitor the Hamiltonian
and momentum constraints during evolution, with significant violations of these
constraints indicating the presence of instabilities. In this paper we rewrite
the momentum constraints as first-order evolution equations, and show that the
popular BSSN formulation of the Einstein equations explicitly uses the momentum
constraints as evolution equations. We conjecture that this feature is a key
reason for the relative success of the BSSN formulation in numerical
relativity.Comment: 8 pages, minor grammatical correction
Can Black Holes Decay to Naked Singularities?
We investigate thermodynamic properties of two types of asymptotically
anti-de Sitter spacetimes: black holes and singular scalar field spacetimes. We
describe the possibility that thermodynamic phase transitions can transform one
spacetime into another, suggesting that black holes can radiate to naked
singularities.Comment: 5 pages, Essay for 2001 Gravity Research Foundation competition, to
appear in IJMP
Interpolating compact binary waveforms using the singular value decomposition
Compact binary systems with total masses between tens and hundreds of solar
masses will produce gravitational waves during their merger phase that are
detectable by second-generation ground-based gravitational-wave detectors. In
order to model the gravitational waveform of the merger epoch of compact binary
coalescence, the full Einstein equations must be solved numerically for the
entire mass and spin parameter space. However, this is computationally
expensive. Several models have been proposed to interpolate the results of
numerical relativity simulations. In this paper we propose a numerical
interpolation scheme that stems from the singular value decomposition. This
algorithm shows promise in allowing one to construct arbitrary waveforms within
a certain parameter space given a sufficient density of numerical simulations
covering the same parameter space. We also investigate how similar approaches
could be used to interpolate waveforms in the context of parameter estimation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, presented at the joint 9th Edoardo Amaldi
Conference on Gravitational Waves and 2011 Numerical Relativity - Data
Analysis (NRDA) meetin
Comparisons of binary black hole merger waveforms
This a particularly exciting time for gravitational wave physics.
Ground-based gravitational wave detectors are now operating at a sensitivity
such that gravitational radiation may soon be directly detected, and recently
several groups have independently made significant breakthroughs that have
finally enabled numerical relativists to solve the Einstein field equations for
coalescing black-hole binaries, a key source of gravitational radiation. The
numerical relativity community is now in the position to begin providing
simulated merger waveforms for use by the data analysis community, and it is
therefore very important that we provide ways to validate the results produced
by various numerical approaches. Here, we present a simple comparison of the
waveforms produced by two very different, but equally successful
approaches--the generalized harmonic gauge and the moving puncture methods. We
compare waveforms of equal-mass black hole mergers with minimal or vanishing
spins. The results show exceptional agreement for the final burst of radiation,
with some differences attributable to small spins on the black holes in one
case.Comment: Revtex 4, 5 pages. Published versio
Spontaneous scalarization with massive fields
We study the effect of a mass term in the spontaneous scalarization of
neutron stars, for a wide range of scalar field parameters and neutron star
equations of state. Even though massless scalars have been the focus of
interest in spontaneous scalarization so far, recent observations of binary
systems rule out most of their interesting parameter space. We point out that
adding a mass term to the scalar field potential is a natural extension to the
model that avoids these observational bounds if the Compton wavelength of the
scalar is small compared to the binary separation. Our model is formally
similar to the asymmetron scenario recently introduced in application to
cosmology, though here we are interested in consequences for neutron stars and
thus consider a mass term that does not modify the geometry on cosmological
scales. We review the allowed values for the mass and scalarization parameters
in the theory given current binary system observations and black hole spin
measurements. We show that within the allowed ranges, spontaneous scalarization
can have nonperturbative, strong effects that may lead to observable signatures
in binary neutron star or black hole-neutron star mergers, or even in isolated
neutron stars.This research was supported by NSF Grants No. PHY-1065710 and No. PHY-1305682, NASA Grant No. NNX11AI49G, STFC GR Roller Grant No. ST/L000636/1 (F. M. R.) and the Simons Foundation (F. P.). Computational resources were provided by the Orbital cluster at Princeton University and the COSMOS Shared Memory system at DAMTP, University of Cambridge operated on behalf of the STFC DiRAC HPC Facility. The latter equipment is funded by BIS National E-infrastructure capital Grant No. ST/J005673/1 and STFC Grants No. ST/H008586/1, No. ST/K00333X/1, and No. ST/J001341/1.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Physical Society via http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.93.06400
Critical Collapse of the Massless Scalar Field in Axisymmetry
We present results from a numerical study of critical gravitational collapse
of axisymmetric distributions of massless scalar field energy. We find
threshold behavior that can be described by the spherically symmetric critical
solution with axisymmetric perturbations. However, we see indications of a
growing, non-spherical mode about the spherically symmetric critical solution.
The effect of this instability is that the small asymmetry present in what
would otherwise be a spherically symmetric self-similar solution grows. This
growth continues until a bifurcation occurs and two distinct regions form on
the axis, each resembling the spherically symmetric self-similar solution. The
existence of a non-spherical unstable mode is in conflict with previous
perturbative results, and we therefore discuss whether such a mode exists in
the continuum limit, or whether we are instead seeing a marginally stable mode
that is rendered unstable by numerical approximation.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Black Hole Mergers and Unstable Circular Orbits
We describe recent numerical simulations of the merger of a class of equal
mass, non-spinning, eccentric binary black hole systems in general relativity.
We show that with appropriate fine-tuning of the initial conditions to a region
of parameter space we denote the threshold of immediate merger, the binary
enters a phase of close interaction in a near-circular orbit, stays there for
an amount of time proportional to logarithmic distance from the threshold in
parameter space, then either separates or merges to form a single Kerr black
hole. To gain a better understanding of this phenomena we study an analogous
problem in the evolution of equatorial geodesics about a central Kerr black
hole. A similar threshold of capture exists for appropriate classes of initial
conditions, and tuning to threshold the geodesics approach one of the unstable
circular geodesics of the Kerr spacetime. Remarkably, with a natural mapping of
the parameters of the geodesic to that of the equal mass system, the scaling
exponent describing the whirl phase of each system turns out to be quite
similar. Armed with this lone piece of evidence that an approximate
correspondence might exist between near-threshold evolution of geodesics and
generic binary mergers, we illustrate how this information can be used to
estimate the cross section and energy emitted in the ultra relativistic black
hole scattering problem. This could eventually be of use in providing estimates
for the related problem of parton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider in
extra dimension scenarios where black holes are produced.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures; updated to coincide with journal versio
Ninja data analysis with a detection pipeline based on the Hilbert-Huang Transform
The Ninja data analysis challenge allowed the study of the sensitivity of
data analysis pipelines to binary black hole numerical relativity waveforms in
simulated Gaussian noise at the design level of the LIGO observatory and the
VIRGO observatory. We analyzed NINJA data with a pipeline based on the Hilbert
Huang Transform, utilizing a detection stage and a characterization stage:
detection is performed by triggering on excess instantaneous power,
characterization is performed by displaying the kernel density enhanced (KD)
time-frequency trace of the signal. Using the simulated data based on the two
LIGO detectors, we were able to detect 77 signals out of 126 above SNR 5 in
coincidence, with 43 missed events characterized by signal to noise ratio SNR
less than 10. Characterization of the detected signals revealed the merger part
of the waveform in high time and frequency resolution, free from time-frequency
uncertainty. We estimated the timelag of the signals between the detectors
based on the optimal overlap of the individual KD time-frequency maps, yielding
estimates accurate within a fraction of a millisecond for half of the events. A
coherent addition of the data sets according to the estimated timelag
eventually was used in a characterization of the event.Comment: Accepted for publication in CQG, special issue NRDA proceedings 200
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