Formulas for GW damping and heating effects are derived for arbitrary ℓ ≥ 2, with enhanced effects suggesting higher modes are unlikely to be observed in astrophysical GW signals.
Numerical relativity with characteristic evolution, using six angular patches
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abstract
The characteristic approach to numerical relativity is a useful tool in evolving gravitational systems. In the past this has been implemented using two patches of stereographic angular coordinates. In other applications, a six-patch angular coordinate system has proved effective. Here we investigate the use of a six-patch system in characteristic numerical relativity, by comparing an existing two-patch implementation (using second-order finite differencing throughout) with a new six-patch implementation (using either second- or fourth-order finite differencing for the angular derivatives). We compare these different codes by monitoring the Einstein constraint equations, numerically evaluated independently from the evolution. We find that, compared to the (second-order) two-patch code at equivalent resolutions, the errors of the second-order six-patch code are smaller by a factor of about 2, and the errors of the fourth-order six-patch code are smaller by a factor of nearly 50.
fields
gr-qc 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Gravitational wave interactions with matter: beyond quadrupolar perturbations
Formulas for GW damping and heating effects are derived for arbitrary ℓ ≥ 2, with enhanced effects suggesting higher modes are unlikely to be observed in astrophysical GW signals.