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Highly eccentric inspirals into a black hole

Author(s)
Osburn, Thomas; Evans, Charles R.; Warburton, Niels J
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Abstract
We model the inspiral of a compact stellar-mass object into a massive nonrotating black hole including all dissipative and conservative first-order-in-the-mass-ratio effects on the orbital motion. The techniques we develop allow inspirals with initial eccentricities as high as e~0.8 and initial separations as large as p~50 to be evolved through many thousands of orbits up to the onset of the plunge into the black hole. The inspiral is computed using an osculating elements scheme driven by a hybridized self-force model, which combines Lorenz-gauge self-force results with highly accurate flux data from a Regge-Wheeler-Zerilli code. The high accuracy of our hybrid self-force model allows the orbital phase of the inspirals to be tracked to within ~0.1 radians or better. The difference between self-force models and inspirals computed in the radiative approximation is quantified.
Date issued
2016-03
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/101775
Department
MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research
Journal
Physical Review D
Publisher
American Physical Society
Citation
Osburn, Thomas, Niels Warburton, and Charles R. Evans. "Highly eccentric inspirals into a black hole." Phys. Rev. D 93, 064024 (March 2016). © 2016 American Physical Society
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1550-7998
1550-2368

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