383 research outputs found
The inverse problem for pulsating neutron stars: A ``fingerprint analysis'' for the supranuclear equation of state
We study the problem of detecting, and infering astrophysical information
from, gravitational waves from a pulsating neutron star. We show that the fluid
f and p-modes, as well as the gravitational-wave w-modes may be detectable from
sources in our own galaxy, and investigate how accurately the frequencies and
damping rates of these modes can be infered from a noisy gravitational-wave
data stream. Based on the conclusions of this discussion we propose a strategy
for revealing the supranuclear equation of state using the neutron star
fingerprints: the observed frequencies of an f and a p-mode. We also discuss
how well the source can be located in the sky using observations with several
detectors.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Templates for stellar mass black holes falling into supermassive black holes
The spin modulated gravitational wave signals, which we shall call smirches,
emitted by stellar mass black holes tumbling and inspiralling into massive
black holes have extremely complicated shapes. Tracking these signals with the
aid of pattern matching techniques, such as Wiener filtering, is likely to be
computationally an impossible exercise. In this article we propose using a
mixture of optimal and non-optimal methods to create a search hierarchy to ease
the computational burden. Furthermore, by employing the method of principal
components (also known as singular value decomposition) we explicitly
demonstrate that the effective dimensionality of the search parameter space of
smirches is likely to be just three or four, much smaller than what has
hitherto been thought to be about nine or ten. This result, based on a limited
study of the parameter space, should be confirmed by a more exhaustive study
over the parameter space as well as Monte-Carlo simulations to test the
predictions made in this paper.Comment: 12 pages, 4 Tables, 4th LISA symposium, submitted to CQ
Faithful transformation of quasi-isotropic to Weyl-Papapetrou coordinates: A prerequisite to compare metrics
We demonstrate how one should transform correctly quasi-isotropic coordinates
to Weyl-Papapetrou coordinates in order to compare the metric around a rotating
star that has been constructed numerically in the former coordinates with an
axially symmetric stationary metric that is given through an analytical form in
the latter coordinates. Since a stationary metric associated with an isolated
object that is built numerically partly refers to a non-vacuum solution
(interior of the star) the transformation of its coordinates to Weyl-Papapetrou
coordinates, which are usually used to describe vacuum axisymmetric and
stationary solutions of Einstein equations, is not straightforward in the
non-vacuum region. If this point is \textit{not} taken into consideration, one
may end up to erroneous conclusions about how well a specific analytical metric
matches the metric around the star, due to fallacious coordinate
transformations.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Can the post-Newtonian gravitational waveform of an inspiraling binary be improved by solving the energy balance equation numerically?
The detection of gravitational waves from inspiraling compact binaries using
matched filtering depends crucially on the availability of accurate template
waveforms. We determine whether the accuracy of the templates' phasing can be
improved by solving the post-Newtonian energy balance equation numerically,
rather than (as is normally done) analytically within the post-Newtonian
perturbative expansion. By specializing to the limit of a small mass ratio, we
find evidence that there is no gain in accuracy.Comment: 13 pages, RevTeX, 5 figures included via eps
Corrections and Comments on the Multipole Moments of Axisymmetric Electrovacuum Spacetimes
Following the method of Hoenselaers and Perj\'{e}s we present a new corrected
and dimensionally consistent set of multipole gravitational and electromagnetic
moments for stationary axisymmetric spacetimes. Furthermore, we use our results
to compute the multipole moments, both gravitational and electromagnetic, of a
Kerr-Newman black hole.Comment: This is a revised and corrected versio
Gravitational waves from inspiraling compact binaries: Second post-Newtonian waveforms as search templates
We ascertain the effectiveness of the second post-Newtonian approximation to
the gravitational waves emitted during the adiabatic inspiral of a compact
binary system as templates for signal searches with kilometer-scale
interferometric detectors. The reference signal is obtained by solving the
Teukolsky equation for a small mass moving on a circular orbit around a large
nonrotating black hole. Fitting factors computed from this signal and these
templates, for various types of binary systems, are all above the 90% mark.
According to Apostolatos' criterion, second post-Newtonian waveforms should
make acceptably effective search templates.Comment: LaTeX, one eps figure. Hires and color versions are available from
http://jovian.physics.uoguelph.ca/~droz/uni/papers/search.htm
Radiation-reaction-induced evolution of circular orbits of particles around Kerr Black Holes
It is demonstrated that, in the adiabatic approximation, non-Equatorial
circular orbits of particles in the Kerr metric (i.e. orbits of constant
Boyer-Lindquist radius) remain circular under the influence of gravitational
radiation reaction. A brief discussion is given of conditions for breakdown of
adiabaticity and of whether slightly non-circular orbits are stable against the
growth of eccentricity.Comment: 23 pages. Revtex 3.0. Inquiries to [email protected]
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