Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity: Initial data construction and evolution of bound states

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity : Initial data construction and evolution of bound states. / Okawa, Hirotada; Witek, Helvi; Cardoso, Vitor.

In: Physical Review D, Vol. 89, No. 10, 104032, 21.05.2014.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Okawa, H, Witek, H & Cardoso, V 2014, 'Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity: Initial data construction and evolution of bound states', Physical Review D, vol. 89, no. 10, 104032. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.104032

APA

Okawa, H., Witek, H., & Cardoso, V. (2014). Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity: Initial data construction and evolution of bound states. Physical Review D, 89(10), [104032]. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.104032

Vancouver

Okawa H, Witek H, Cardoso V. Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity: Initial data construction and evolution of bound states. Physical Review D. 2014 May 21;89(10). 104032. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.89.104032

Author

Okawa, Hirotada ; Witek, Helvi ; Cardoso, Vitor. / Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity : Initial data construction and evolution of bound states. In: Physical Review D. 2014 ; Vol. 89, No. 10.

Bibtex

@article{324339c9711247069cf553c6efedc768,
title = "Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity: Initial data construction and evolution of bound states",
abstract = "Fundamental fields are a natural outcome in cosmology and particle physics and might therefore serve as a proxy for more complex interactions. The equivalence principle implies that all forms of matter gravitate, and one therefore expects relevant, universal imprints of new physics in strong field gravity, such as that encountered close to black holes. Fundamental fields in the vicinities of supermassive black holes give rise to extremely long-lived, or even unstable, configurations, which slowly extract angular momentum from the black hole or simply evolve nonlinearly over long time scales, with important implications for particle physics and gravitational-wave physics. Here, we perform a fully nonlinear study of scalar-field condensates around rotating black holes. We provide novel ways to specify initial data for the Einstein-Klein-Gordon system, with potential applications in a variety of scenarios. Our numerical results confirm the existence of long-lived bar modes, which act as lighthouses for gravitational wave emission: the scalar field condenses outside the black hole geometry and acts as a constant frequency gravitational-wave source for very long time scales. This effect could turn out to be a potential signature of beyond standard model physics and also a promising source of gravitational waves for future gravitational-wave detectors.",
keywords = "APPARENT HORIZON FINDER, X-RAY BINARIES, GRAVITATIONAL-WAVES, PERTURBATIONS, SCALAR, COLLAPSE, EXPLOSIONS, NUCLEI, ENERGY",
author = "Hirotada Okawa and Helvi Witek and Vitor Cardoso",
year = "2014",
month = may,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1103/PhysRevD.89.104032",
language = "English",
volume = "89",
journal = "Physical Review D",
issn = "2470-0010",
publisher = "American Physical Society",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Black holes and fundamental fields in numerical relativity

T2 - Initial data construction and evolution of bound states

AU - Okawa, Hirotada

AU - Witek, Helvi

AU - Cardoso, Vitor

PY - 2014/5/21

Y1 - 2014/5/21

N2 - Fundamental fields are a natural outcome in cosmology and particle physics and might therefore serve as a proxy for more complex interactions. The equivalence principle implies that all forms of matter gravitate, and one therefore expects relevant, universal imprints of new physics in strong field gravity, such as that encountered close to black holes. Fundamental fields in the vicinities of supermassive black holes give rise to extremely long-lived, or even unstable, configurations, which slowly extract angular momentum from the black hole or simply evolve nonlinearly over long time scales, with important implications for particle physics and gravitational-wave physics. Here, we perform a fully nonlinear study of scalar-field condensates around rotating black holes. We provide novel ways to specify initial data for the Einstein-Klein-Gordon system, with potential applications in a variety of scenarios. Our numerical results confirm the existence of long-lived bar modes, which act as lighthouses for gravitational wave emission: the scalar field condenses outside the black hole geometry and acts as a constant frequency gravitational-wave source for very long time scales. This effect could turn out to be a potential signature of beyond standard model physics and also a promising source of gravitational waves for future gravitational-wave detectors.

AB - Fundamental fields are a natural outcome in cosmology and particle physics and might therefore serve as a proxy for more complex interactions. The equivalence principle implies that all forms of matter gravitate, and one therefore expects relevant, universal imprints of new physics in strong field gravity, such as that encountered close to black holes. Fundamental fields in the vicinities of supermassive black holes give rise to extremely long-lived, or even unstable, configurations, which slowly extract angular momentum from the black hole or simply evolve nonlinearly over long time scales, with important implications for particle physics and gravitational-wave physics. Here, we perform a fully nonlinear study of scalar-field condensates around rotating black holes. We provide novel ways to specify initial data for the Einstein-Klein-Gordon system, with potential applications in a variety of scenarios. Our numerical results confirm the existence of long-lived bar modes, which act as lighthouses for gravitational wave emission: the scalar field condenses outside the black hole geometry and acts as a constant frequency gravitational-wave source for very long time scales. This effect could turn out to be a potential signature of beyond standard model physics and also a promising source of gravitational waves for future gravitational-wave detectors.

KW - APPARENT HORIZON FINDER

KW - X-RAY BINARIES

KW - GRAVITATIONAL-WAVES

KW - PERTURBATIONS

KW - SCALAR

KW - COLLAPSE

KW - EXPLOSIONS

KW - NUCLEI

KW - ENERGY

U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.89.104032

DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.89.104032

M3 - Journal article

VL - 89

JO - Physical Review D

JF - Physical Review D

SN - 2470-0010

IS - 10

M1 - 104032

ER -

ID: 300077378