62 research outputs found
First Law of Mechanics for Compact Binaries on Eccentric Orbits
Using the canonical Arnowitt-Deser-Misner Hamiltonian formalism, a "first law
of mechanics" is established for binary systems of point masses moving along
generic stable bound (eccentric) orbits. This relationship is checked to hold
within the post-Newtonian approximation to general relativity, up to third
(3PN) order. Several applications are discussed, including the use of
gravitational self-force results to inform post-Newtonian theory and the
effective one-body model for eccentric-orbit compact binaries.Comment: 26 pages; matches published versio
The Overlap of Numerical Relativity, Perturbation Theory and Post-Newtonian Theory in the Binary Black Hole Problem
Inspiralling and coalescing binary black holes are promising sources of
gravitational radiation. The orbital motion and gravitational-wave emission of
such system can be modelled using a variety of approximation schemes and
numerical methods in general relativity: the post-Newtonian formalism, black
hole perturbation theory, numerical relativity simulations, and the effective
one-body model. We review recent work at the multiple interfaces of these
analytical and numerical techniques, emphasizing the use of
coordinate-invariant relationships to perform meaningful comparisons. Such
comparisons provide independent checks of the validity of the various
calculations, they inform the development of a universal, semi-analytical model
of the binary dynamics and gravitational-wave emission, and they help to
delineate the respective domains of validity of each approximation method. For
instance, several recent comparisons suggest that perturbation theory may find
applications in a broader range of physical problems than previously thought,
including the radiative inspiral of intermediate mass-ratio and comparable-mass
black hole binaries.Comment: 35 pages, 9 figures; invited review for IJMPD; v2: references added,
matches published versio
A Note on Celestial Mechanics in Kerr Spacetime
The Hamilton-Jacobi equation for test particles in the Kerr geometry is
separable. Using action-angle variables, we establish several relations between
various physical quantities that characterize bound timelike geodesic orbits
around a spinning black hole, including the particle's rest mass, energy,
angular momentum, mean redshift and fundamental frequencies. These relations
are explicitly checked to hold true in the particular case of equatorial
circular orbits. An application to the gravitational wave-driven, adiabatic
inspiral of extreme-mass-ratio compact binaries is briefly discussed.Comment: 7 pages; matches version to appear in Class. Quant. Gra
The complete non-spinning effective-one-body metric at linear order in the mass ratio
Using the main result of a companion paper, in which the binding energy of a
circular-orbit non-spinning compact binary system is computed at leading-order
beyond the test-particle approximation, the exact expression of the
effective-one-body (EOB) metric component g^eff_tt is obtained through first
order in the mass ratio. Combining these results with the recent gravitational
self-force calculation of the periastron advance for circular orbits in the
Schwarzschild geometry, the EOB metric component g^eff_rr is also determined at
linear order in the mass ratio. These results assume that the mapping between
the real and effective Hamiltonians at the second and third post-Newtonian (PN)
orders holds at all PN orders. Our findings also confirm the advantage of
resumming the PN dynamics around the test-particle limit if the goal is to
obtain a flexible model that can smoothly connect the test-mass and equal-mass
limits.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures; appendix generalized to include the logarithmic
contributions in the post-Newtonian Hamiltonian. Results unchanged. Matches
version to be published in Phys. Rev.
First Law of Mechanics for Black Hole Binaries with Spins
We use the canonical Hamiltonian formalism to generalize to spinning point
particles the first law of mechanics established for binary systems of
non-spinning point masses moving on circular orbits [Le Tiec, Blanchet, and
Whiting, Phys. Rev. D 85, 064039 (2012)]. We find that the redshift observable
of each particle is related in a very simple manner to the canonical
Hamiltonian and, more generally, to a class of Fokker-type Hamiltonians. Our
results are valid through linear order in the spin of each particle, but hold
also for quadratic couplings between the spins of different particles. The
knowledge of spin effects in the Hamiltonian allows us to compute spin-orbit
terms in the redshift variable through 2.5PN order, for circular orbits and
spins aligned or anti-aligned with the orbital angular momentum. To describe
extended bodies such as black holes, we supplement the first law for spinning
point-particle binaries with some "constitutive relations" that can be used for
diagnosis of spin measurements in quasi-equilibrium initial data.Comment: 16 pages; matches the published versio
Multipolar Particles in Helically Symmetric Spacetimes
We consider a binary system of spinning compact objects with internal
structure, moving along an exactly circular orbit, and modelled within the
multipolar gravitational skeleton formalism, up to quadrupolar order. We prove
that the worldline of each multipolar particle is an integral curve of the
helical Killing vector field, and that the 4-velocity, 4-momentum, spin tensor
and quadrupole tensor of each particle are Lie-dragged along those worldlines.
The geometrical framework developed in this paper paves the way to an extension
of the first law of compact-object binary mechanics up to quadrupolar order.Comment: 37 pages, 2 figure
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