335 research outputs found
La nuova Anuac: editoriale
Editorial article from the new Editor-in-Chief
Perturbations and Stability of Black Ellipsoids
We study the perturbations of two classes of static black ellipsoid solutions
of four dimensional vacuum Einstein equations. Such solutions are described by
generic off--diagonal metrics which are generated by anholonomic transforms of
diagonal metrics. The analysis is performed in the approximation of small
eccentricity deformations of the Schwarzschild solution. We conclude that such
anisotropic black hole objects may be stable with respect to the perturbations
parametrized by the Schrodinger equations in the framework of the
one--dimensional inverse scattering theory.Comment: Published variant in IJMD with small modifications in formulas and
new reference
Electromagnetic radiation from collisions at almost the speed of light: an extremely relativistic charged particle falling into a Schwarzschild black hole
We investigate the electromagnetic radiation released during the high energy
collision of a charged point particle with a four-dimensional Schwarzschild
black hole. We show that the spectra is flat, and well described by a classical
calculation. We also compare the total electromagnetic and gravitational
energies emitted, and find that the former is supressed in relation to the
latter for very high energies. These results could apply to the astrophysical
world in the case charged stars and small charged black holes are out there
colliding into large black holes, and to a very high energy collision
experiment in a four-dimensional world. In this latter scenario the calculation
is to be used for the moments just after the black hole formation, when the
collision of charged debris with the newly formed black hole is certainly
expected. Since the calculation is four-dimensional, it does not directly apply
to Tev-scale gravity black holes, as these inhabit a world of six to eleven
dimensions, although our results should qualitatively hold when extrapolated
with some care to higher dimensions.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Cold Plasma Dispersion Relations in the Vicinity of a Schwarzschild Black Hole Horizon
We apply the ADM 3+1 formalism to derive the general relativistic
magnetohydrodynamic equations for cold plasma in spatially flat Schwarzschild
metric. Respective perturbed equations are linearized for non-magnetized and
magnetized plasmas both in non-rotating and rotating backgrounds. These are
then Fourier analyzed and the corresponding dispersion relations are obtained.
These relations are discussed for the existence of waves with positive angular
frequency in the region near the horizon. Our results support the fact that no
information can be extracted from the Schwarzschild black hole. It is concluded
that negative phase velocity propagates in the rotating background whether the
black hole is rotating or non-rotating.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures accepted for publication in Gen. Relat. & Gravi
Understanding initial data for black hole collisions
Numerical relativity, applied to collisions of black holes, starts with
initial data for black holes already in each other's strong field. The initial
hypersurface data typically used for computation is based on mathematical
simplifying prescriptions, such as conformal flatness of the 3-geometry and
longitudinality of the extrinsic curvature. In the case of head on collisions
of equal mass holes, there is evidence that such prescriptions work reasonably
well, but it is not clear why, or whether this success is more generally valid.
Here we study these questions by considering the ``particle limit'' for head on
collisions of nonspinning holes. Einstein's equations are linearized in the
mass of the small hole, and described by a single gauge invariant spacetime
function psi, for each multipole. The resulting equations have been solved by
numerical evolution for collisions starting from various initial separations,
and the evolution is studied on a sequence of hypersurfaces. In particular, we
extract hypersurface data, that is psi and its time derivative, on surfaces of
constant background Schwarzschild time. These evolved data can then be compared
with ``prescribed'' data, evolved data can be replaced by prescribed data on
any hypersurface, and evolved further forward in time, a gauge invariant
measure of deviation from conformal flatness can be evaluated, etc. The main
findings of this study are: (i) For holes of unequal mass the use of prescribed
data on late hypersurfaces is not successful. (ii) The failure is likely due to
the inability of the prescribed data to represent the near field of the smaller
hole. (iii) The discrepancy in the extrinsic curvature is more important than
in the 3-geometry. (iv) The use of the more general conformally flat
longitudinal data does not notably improve this picture.Comment: 20 pages, REVTEX, 26 PS figures include
Colliding Black Holes: The Close Limit
The problem of the mutual attraction and joining of two black holes is of
importance as both a source of gravitational waves and as a testbed of
numerical relativity. If the holes start out close enough that they are
initially surrounded by a common horizon, the problem can be viewed as a
perturbation of a single black hole. We take initial data due to Misner for
close black holes, apply perturbation theory and evolve the data with the
Zerilli equation. The computed gravitational radiation agrees with and extends
the results of full numerical computations.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex, 3 postscript figures included, CGPG-94/2-
Head-on collisions of black holes: the particle limit
We compute gravitational radiation waveforms, spectra and energies for a
point particle of mass falling from rest at radius into a
Schwarzschild hole of mass . This radiation is found to lowest order in
with the use of a Laplace transform. In contrast with numerical
relativity results for head-on collisions of equal-mass holes, the radiated
energy is found not to be a monotonically increasing function of initial
separation; there is a local radiated-energy maximum at . The
present results, along with results for infall from infinity, provide a
complete catalog of waveforms and spectra for particle infall. We give a
representative sample from that catalog and an interesting observation: Unlike
the simple spectra for other head-on collisions (either of particle and hole,
or of equal mass holes) the spectra for show a series of
evenly spaced bumps. A simple explanation is given for this. Lastly, our energy
vs. results are compared with approximation methods used elsewhere, for
small and for large initial separation.Comment: 15 pages, REVTeX, 25 figure
Evolving the Bowen-York initial data for spinning black holes
The Bowen-York initial value data typically used in numerical relativity to
represent spinning black hole are not those of a constant-time slice of the
Kerr spacetime. If Bowen-York initial data are used for each black hole in a
collision, the emitted radiation will be partially due to the ``relaxation'' of
the individual holes to Kerr form. We compute this radiation by treating the
geometry for a single hole as a perturbation of a Schwarzschild black hole, and
by using second order perturbation theory. We discuss the extent to which
Bowen-York data can be expected accurately to represent Kerr holes.Comment: 10 pages, RevTeX, 4 figures included with psfi
Electromagnetic waves around dilatonic stars and naked singularities
We study the propagation of classical electromagnetic waves on the simplest
four-dimensional spherically symmetric metric with a dilaton background field.
Solutions to the relevant equations are obtained perturbatively in a parameter
which measures the strength of the dilaton field (hence parameterizes the
departure from Schwarzschild geometry). The loss of energy from outgoing modes
is estimated as a back-scattering process against the dilaton background, which
would affect the luminosity of stars with a dilaton field. The radiation
emitted by a freely falling point-like source on such a background is also
studied by analytical and numerical methods.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Shell sources as a probe of relativistic effects in neutron star models
A perturbing shell is introduced as a device for studying the excitation of
fluid motions in relativistic stellar models. We show that this approach allows
a reasonably clean separation of radiation from the shell and from fluid
motions in the star, and provides broad flexibility in the location and
timescale of perturbations driving the fluid motions. With this model we
compare the relativistic and Newtonian results for the generation of even
parity gravitational waves from constant density models. Our results suggest
that relativistic effects will not be important in computations of the
gravitational emission except possibly in the case of excitation of the neutron
star on very short time scales.Comment: 16 pages LaTeX with 6 eps figures; submitted to Phys. Rev.
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