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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(18): 181101, 2020 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33196223

ABSTRACT

The inspiral phasing of binary black holes at intermediate mass ratios (m_{2}/m_{1}∼10^{-3}) is important for gravitational wave observations, but not accessible to standard modeling techniques: The accuracy of the small mass-ratio (SMR) expansion is unknown at intermediate mass ratios, whereas numerical relativity simulations cannot reach this regime. This article assesses the accuracy of the SMR expansion by extracting the first three terms of the SMR expansion from numerical relativity data for nonspinning, quasicircular binaries. We recover the leading term predicted by SMR theory and obtain a robust prediction of the next-to-leading term. The influence of higher-order terms is bounded to be small, indicating that the SMR series truncated at next-to-leading order is quite accurate at intermediate mass ratios and even at nearly comparable mass binaries. We estimate the range of applicability for SMR and post-Newtonian series for nonspinning, quasicircular inspirals.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 117(19): 191101, 2016 Nov 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27858443

ABSTRACT

The redshift factor z is an invariant quantity of fundamental interest in post-Newtonian and self-force descriptions of compact binaries. It connects different approximation schemes, and plays a central role in the first law of binary black hole mechanics, which links local quantities to asymptotic measures of energy and angular momentum in these systems. Through this law, the redshift factor is conjectured to have a close relation to the surface gravity of the event horizons of black holes in circular orbits. We propose and implement a novel method for extracting the redshift factor on apparent horizons in numerical simulations of quasicircular binary inspirals. Our results confirm the conjectured relationship between z and the surface gravity of the holes and that the first law holds to a remarkable degree for binary inspirals. The redshift factor enables tests of analytic predictions for z in spacetimes where the binary is only approximately circular, giving a new connection between analytic approximations and numerical simulations.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 116(18): 181101, 2016 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27203312

ABSTRACT

Extracting the unique information on ultradense nuclear matter from the gravitational waves emitted by merging neutron-star binaries requires robust theoretical models of the signal. We develop a novel effective-one-body waveform model that includes, for the first time, dynamic (instead of only adiabatic) tides of the neutron star as well as the merger signal for neutron-star-black-hole binaries. We demonstrate the importance of the dynamic tides by comparing our model against new numerical-relativity simulations of nonspinning neutron-star-black-hole binaries spanning more than 24 gravitational-wave cycles, and to other existing numerical simulations for double neutron-star systems. Furthermore, we derive an effective description that makes explicit the dependence of matter effects on two key parameters: tidal deformability and fundamental oscillation frequency.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 115(3): 031102, 2015 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26230780

ABSTRACT

We present the first numerical-relativity simulation of a compact-object binary whose gravitational waveform is long enough to cover the entire frequency band of advanced gravitational-wave detectors, such as LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA, for mass ratio 7 and total mass as low as 45.5M_{⊙}. We find that effective-one-body models, either uncalibrated or calibrated against substantially shorter numerical-relativity waveforms at smaller mass ratios, reproduce our new waveform remarkably well, with a negligible loss in detection rate due to modeling error. In contrast, post-Newtonian inspiral waveforms and existing calibrated phenomenological inspiral-merger-ringdown waveforms display greater disagreement with our new simulation. The disagreement varies substantially depending on the specific post-Newtonian approximant used.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 111(24): 241104, 2013 Dec 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24483642

ABSTRACT

This Letter presents a publicly available catalog of 174 numerical binary black hole simulations following up to 35 orbits. The catalog includes 91 precessing binaries, mass ratios up to 8∶1, orbital eccentricities from a few percent to 10(-5), black hole spins up to 98% of the theoretical maximum, and radiated energies up to 11.1% of the initial mass. We establish remarkably good agreement with post-Newtonian precession of orbital and spin directions for two new precessing simulations, and we discuss other applications of this catalog. Formidable challenges remain: e.g., precession complicates the connection of numerical and approximate analytical waveforms, and vast regions of the parameter space remain unexplored.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 107(14): 141101, 2011 Sep 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22107182

ABSTRACT

The general relativistic (Mercury-type) periastron advance is calculated here for the first time with exquisite precision in full general relativity. We use accurate numerical relativity simulations of spinless black-hole binaries with mass ratios 1/8≤m(1)/m(2)≤1 and compare with the predictions of several analytic approximation schemes. We find the effective-one-body model to be remarkably accurate and, surprisingly, so also the predictions of self-force theory [replacing m(1)/m(2)→m(1)m(2)/(m(1)+m(2))(2)]. Our results can inform a universal analytic model of the two-body dynamics, crucial for ongoing and future gravitational-wave searches.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 95(9): 091101, 2005 Aug 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16197202

ABSTRACT

The conformal thin-sandwich (CTS) equations are a set of four of the Einstein equations, which generalize the Laplace-Poisson equation of Newton's theory. We examine numerically solutions of the CTS equations describing perturbed Minkowski space, and find only one solution. However, we find two distinct solutions, one even containing a black hole, when the lapse is determined by a fifth elliptic equation through specification of the mean curvature. While the relationship of the two systems and their solutions is a fundamental property of general relativity, this fairly simple example of an elliptic system with nonunique solutions is also of broader interest.

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