672 research outputs found

    Post-Newtonian expansion of gravitational waves from a particle in circular orbit around a Schwarzschild black hole

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    Based upon the formalism recently developed by one of us (MS), we analytically perform the post-Newtonian expansion of gravitational waves from a test particle in circular orbit of radius r0r_0 around a Schwarzschild black hole of mass MM. We calculate gravitational wave forms and luminosity up to v8v^8 order beyond Newtonian, where v=(M/r0)1/2v=(M/r_0)^{1/2}. In particular, we give the exact analytical values of the coefficients of lnv\ln v terms at v6v^6 and v8v^8 orders in the luminosity and confirm the numerical values obtained previously by the other of us (HT) and Nakamura. Our result is valid in the small mass limit of one body and gives an important guideline for the gravitational wave physics of coalescing compact binaries.Comment: 28 pages, (LaTeX), KUNS-126

    Post-Newtonian Expansion of Gravitational Waves from a Particle in Circular Orbits around a Rotating Black Hole :Effects of Black Hole Absorption

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    When a particle moves around a Kerr black hole, it radiates gravitational waves.Some of these waves are absorbed by the black hole. We calculate such absorption of gravitational waves induced by a particle of mass mu in a circular orbit on an equatorial plane around a Kerr black hole of mass M. We assume that the velocity of the particle v is much smaller than the speed of light c and calculate the energy absorption rate analytically. We adopt an analytic technique for the Teukolsky equation developed by Mano, Suzuki and Takasugi. We obtain the energy absorption rate to O((v/c)^8) compared to the lowest order. We find that the black hole absorption occurs at O((v/c)^5) beyond the Newtonian-quadrapole luminosity at infinity in the case when the black hole is rotating, which is O((v/c)^3) lower than the non-rotating case. Using the energy absorption rate, we investigate its effects on the orbital evolution of coalescing compact binaries.Comment: 22 pages, ptptex, no figure

    New Numerical Methods to Evaluate Homogeneous Solutions of the Teukolsky Equation

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    We discuss a numerical method to compute the homogeneous solutions of the Teukolsky equation which is the basic equation of the black hole perturbation method. We use the formalism developed by Mano, Suzuki and Takasugi, in which the homogeneous solutions of the radial Teukolsky equation are expressed in terms of two kinds of series of special functions, and the formulas for the asymptotic amplitudes are derived explicitly.Although the application of this method was previously limited to the analytical evaluation of the homogeneous solutions, we find that it is also useful for numerical computation. We also find that so-called "renormalized angular momentum parameter", ν\nu, can be found only in the limited region of ω\omega for each l,ml,m if we assume ν\nu is real (here, ω\omega is the angular frequency, and ll and mm are degree and order of the spin-weighted spheroidal harmonics respectively). We also compute the flux of the gravitational waves induced by a compact star in a circular orbit on the equatorial plane around a rotating black hole. We find that the relative error of the energy flux is about 101410^{-14} which is much smaller than the one obtained by usual numerical integration methods.Comment: 36 pages,7 figure

    Optimal follow-up observations of gravitational wave events with small optical telescopes

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    We discuss optimal strategy for follow-up observations by 1-3 m class optical/infrared telescopes which target optical/infrared counterparts of gravitational wave events detected with two laser interferometric gravitational wave detectors. The probability maps of transient sources, such as coalescing neutron stars and/or black holes, determined by two laser interferometers generally spread widely. They include the distant region where it is difficult for small aperture telescopes to observe the optical/infrared counterparts. For small telescopes, there is a possibility that it is more advantageous to search for nearby region even if the probability inferred by two gravitational wave detectors is low. We show that in the case of the first three events of advanced LIGO, the posterior probability map, derived by using a distance prior restricted to a nearby region, is different from that derived without such restriction. This suggests that the optimal strategy for small telescopes to perform follow-up observation of LIGO-Virgo's three events are different from what has been searched so far. We also show that, when the binary is nearly edge-on, it is possible that the true direction is not included in the 90% posterior probability region. We discuss the optimal strategy to perform optical/infrared follow-up observation with small aperture telescopes based on these facts.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D, added cases of design sensitivitie

    An Improved Search Method for Gravitational Ringing of Black Holes

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    A black hole has characteristic quasi-normal modes that will be excited when it is formed or when the geometry is perturbed. The state of a black hole when the quasi-normal modes are excited is called the gravitational ringing, and detections of it will be a direct confirmation of the existence of black holes. To detect it, a method based on matched filtering needs to be developed. Generically, matched filtering requires a large number of templates, because one has to ensure a proper match of a real gravitational wave with one of template waveforms to keep the detection efficiency as high as possible. On the other hand, the number of templates must be kept as small as possible under limited computational costs. In our previous paper, assuming that the gravitational ringing is dominated by the least-damped (fundamental) mode with the least imaginary part of frequency, we constructed an efficient method for tiling the template space. However, the dependence of the template space metric on the initial phase of a wave was not taken into account. This dependence arises because of an unavoidable mismatch between the parameters of a signal waveform and those given discretely in the template space. In this paper, we properly take this dependence into account and present an improved, efficient search method for gravitational ringing of black holes.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figure

    The cross-correlation search for a hot spot of gravitational waves : Numerical study for point spread function

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    The cross-correlation search for gravitational wave, which is known as 'radiometry', has been previously applied to map of the gravitational wave stochastic background in the sky and also to target on gravitational wave from rotating neutron stars/pulsars. We consider the Virgo cluster where may be appear as `hot spot' spanning few pixels in the sky in radiometry analysis. Our results show that sufficient signal to noise ratio can be accumulated with integration times of the order of a year. We also construct numerical simulation of radiometry analysis, assuming current constructing/upgrading ground-based detectors. Point spread function of the injected sources are confirmed by numerical test. Typical resolution of radiometry analysis is a few square degree which corresponds to several thousand pixels of sky mapping.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, Amaldi 9 & NRD
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