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Circular and non-circular nearly horizon-skimming orbits in Kerr spacetimes

Barausse, E.
•
Hughes, S. A.
•
Rezzolla, L.
2007
  • journal article

Periodico
PHYSICAL REVIEW D, PARTICLES, FIELDS, GRAVITATION, AND COSMOLOGY
Abstract
We have performed a detailed analysis of orbital motion in the vicinity of a nearly extremal Kerr black hole. For very rapidly rotating black holes (spin a=J/M>0.9524M) we have found a class of very strong field eccentric orbits whose angular momentum L_z increases with the orbit's inclination with respect to the equatorial plane, while keeping latus rectum and eccentricity fixed. This behavior is in contrast with Newtonian intuition, and is in fact opposite to the "normal" behavior of black hole orbits. Such behavior was noted previously for circular orbits; since it only applies to orbits very close to the black hole, they were named "nearly horizon-skimming orbits". Our analysis generalizes this result, mapping out the full generic (inclined and eccentric) family of nearly horizon-skimming orbits. The earlier work on circular orbits reported that, under gravitational radiation emission, nearly horizon-skimming orbits tend to evolve to smaller orbit inclination, toward prograde equatorial configuration. Normal orbits, by contrast, always demonstrate slowly growing orbit inclination (orbits evolve toward the retrograde equatorial configuration). Using up-to-date Teukolsky-fluxes, we have concluded that the earlier result was incorrect: all circular orbits, including nearly horizon-skimming ones, exhibit growing orbit inclination. Using kludge fluxes based on a Post-Newtonian expansion corrected with fits to circular and to equatorial Teukolsky-fluxes, we argue that the inclination grows also for eccentric nearly horizon-skimming orbits. We also find that the inclination change is, in any case, very small. As such, we conclude that these orbits are not likely to have a clear and peculiar imprint on the gravitational waveforms expected to be measured by the space-based detector LISA.
DOI
10.1103/PhysRevD.76.044007
WOS
WOS:000249155800059
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/89691
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-34547874953
https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.76.044007
https://arxiv.org/abs/0704.0138
Diritti
metadata only access
Soggetti
  • General Relativity an...

Scopus© citazioni
16
Data di acquisizione
Jun 2, 2022
Vedi dettagli
Web of Science© citazioni
16
Data di acquisizione
Mar 26, 2024
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