detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

oai:arXiv.org:2411.13801

Tema
General Relativity and Quantum Cos... Astrophysics - High Energy Astroph...
Autor
Wang, Hao Zou, Yuan-Chuan Wu, Qing Wen
Categoría

ciencias: astrofísica

Año

2024

fecha de cotización

27/11/2024

Palabras clave
black binary radiation initial hole average merger ${e_t}_0 0 inspiral energy orbital
Métrico

Resumen

We analyze 192 sets of binary black hole merger data in eccentric orbits obtained from RIT, decomposing the radiation energy into three distinct phases through time: inspiral, late inspiral to merger, and ringdown.

Our investigation reveals a universal oscillatory behavior in radiation energy across these phases, influenced by varying initial eccentricities.

From a post-Newtonian perspective, we compare the orbital average of radiation energy with the non-orbital average during the inspiral phase.

Our findings indicate that the oscillatory patterns arise from non-orbital average effects, which disappear when orbital averaging is applied.

This orbital effect significantly impacts the mass, spin, and recoil velocity of the merger remnant, with its influence increasing as the initial eccentricity rises.

Specifically, in the post-Newtonian framework, the amplitudes of oscillations for mass, spin, and recoil velocity at ${e_t}_0 = 0.5$ (initial temporal eccentricity of PN) are enhanced by approximately 10, 5, and 7 times, respectively, compared to those at ${e_t}_0 = 0.1$.

For a circular orbit, where ${e_t}_0 = 0.0$, the oscillations vanish entirely.

These findings have important implications for waveform modeling, numerical relativity simulations, and the characterization of binary black hole formation channels.

;Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted

Wang, Hao,Zou, Yuan-Chuan,Wu, Qing Wen, 2024, Unique and Universal Effects of Oscillation in Eccentric Orbital Binary Black Hole Mergers beyond Orbital Averaging

Documento

Abrir

Compartir

Fuente

Artículos recomendados por ES/IODE IA

Skin cancer prevention behaviors, beliefs, distress, and worry among hispanics in Florida and Puerto Rico
skin cancer hispanic/latino prevention behaviors protection motivation theory florida puerto rico variables rico psychosocial behavior response efficacy levels skin cancer participants prevention behaviors spanish-preferring tampeños puerto hispanics