Eccentric mergers of binary Proca stars
Pith reviewed 2026-05-22 20:13 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
The relative phase between two merging Proca stars controls whether the outcome is prompt black-hole formation, a hypermassive remnant, or an unstable spinning m-bar=2 star, and can generate odd-mode gravitational waves absent from black-hp
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Systematic variation of the relative phase and orbital boost in eccentric equal-mass m-bar=1 Proca-star binaries shows that the phase exerts paramount control over the nonlinear evolution: prompt black-hole formation with a transient Proca remnant, formation of a hypermassive m-bar=1 Proca star, or emergence of a dynamically unstable spinning m-bar=2 Proca star can all occur. Under certain phase alignments the emitted gravitational waves contain significant odd modes (for example the l=m=3 mode) that are absent in black-hole mergers and may serve as unique identifiers of these objects.
What carries the argument
The relative phase between the Proca fields of the two stars, which sets the interference pattern that governs the nonlinear post-merger dynamics and the selection of gravitational-wave multipoles.
If this is right
- Different relative phases produce qualitatively distinct remnants: black holes with transient Proca clouds, long-lived hypermassive m-bar=1 stars, or spinning m-bar=2 stars that are dynamically unstable.
- Gravitational-wave signals from some mergers contain odd multipoles such as the l=m=3 mode that do not appear in black-hole mergers.
- The internal phase structure of the Proca field can therefore act as an additional degree of freedom that shapes both the final object and the observable waveform.
- These mergers enlarge the known phenomenology of bosonic-star collisions and the possible astrophysical roles of ultralight bosonic fields.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If ultralight bosonic fields constitute dark matter, phase-dependent merger outcomes could produce a subpopulation of compact objects whose stability and spin properties differ from those formed by ordinary stellar collapse.
- Detection of odd-mode gravitational waves in a merger event without an electromagnetic counterpart might indicate a Proca-star origin even when the remnant itself is not directly resolved.
- The same phase-sensitivity mechanism may operate in mergers of other self-interacting scalar or vector boson stars, suggesting a broader class of phase-controlled exotic compact-object collisions.
Load-bearing premise
The chosen numerical code and initial-data construction faithfully reproduce the nonlinear Proca-field evolution without dominant discretization or gauge artifacts when the relative phase is altered.
What would settle it
A set of otherwise identical simulations in which changing only the relative phase produces no measurable difference in remnant type or in the amplitude of the l=m=3 gravitational-wave mode.
Figures
read the original abstract
We present a numerical relativity study of eccentric mergers of equal-mass rotating $\bar m=1$ Proca stars, focusing on their gravitational-wave (GW) emission. By systematically varying key binary parameters, such as the initial orbital boost, which determines the orbital angular momentum, and the relative phase between the stars, we examine how the internal phase structure of the Proca field influences the merger dynamics and the properties of the emitted GWs. Our simulations demonstrate that the relative phase has paramount impact on the post-merger evolution, resulting in prompt black hole formation accompanied by a transient Proca remnant, the formation of a hypermassive $\bar m=1$ Proca star or even the emergence of a dynamically-unstable spinning $\bar m=2$ Proca star. Under certain conditions, the GW signal exhibits significant odd-modes (e.g., the $\ell=m=3$ mode) that are absent in conventional black hole mergers, potentially serving as unique signatures of these exotic objects. Our findings offer new insights into the phenomenology of bosonic star mergers and the potential astrophysical role of ultralight bosonic fields.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper presents a numerical relativity study of eccentric mergers of equal-mass rotating m-bar=1 Proca stars. By varying the initial orbital boost (controlling orbital angular momentum) and the relative phase between the two stars, the authors investigate how the internal phase structure of the Proca vector field affects merger dynamics and gravitational-wave emission. The central results are that the relative phase has a dominant effect on post-merger evolution, producing outcomes ranging from prompt black-hole formation with a transient Proca remnant, to a hypermassive m-bar=1 Proca star, or a dynamically unstable spinning m-bar=2 Proca star; under some conditions the GW signal contains significant odd modes (e.g., the l=m=3 mode) absent from conventional black-hole mergers.
Significance. If the reported phase-dependent phenomenology is confirmed to be free of numerical artifacts, the work would be significant for the phenomenology of bosonic-star mergers. It identifies potential unique GW signatures (odd-parity modes) that could serve as observational discriminants for ultralight vector fields and adds concrete examples of how internal field structure influences the remnant and waveform in exotic compact-object mergers.
major comments (1)
- [Numerical Methods and Results sections] The manuscript provides no information on grid resolution, convergence tests, or error budgets for the family of simulations in which the relative phase is varied. Because the headline claim is that constructive/destructive interference in the massive vector field produces qualitatively different post-merger fates (prompt collapse, hypermassive m-bar=1 remnant, or unstable m-bar=2 star) and excites odd GW modes, the absence of these tests leaves open the possibility that the reported differences arise from phase-dependent numerical dissipation, constraint violation, or gauge drift rather than from the physics of the Proca field.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The notation m-bar=1 and m-bar=2 is used without an explicit definition or reference to prior Proca-star literature in the abstract; a brief parenthetical clarification would aid readers.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and for recognizing the potential significance of the phase-dependent phenomenology in Proca-star mergers. We address the single major comment below and will revise the manuscript accordingly to strengthen the numerical validation.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Numerical Methods and Results sections] The manuscript provides no information on grid resolution, convergence tests, or error budgets for the family of simulations in which the relative phase is varied. Because the headline claim is that constructive/destructive interference in the massive vector field produces qualitatively different post-merger fates (prompt collapse, hypermassive m-bar=1 remnant, or unstable m-bar=2 star) and excites odd GW modes, the absence of these tests leaves open the possibility that the reported differences arise from phase-dependent numerical dissipation, constraint violation, or gauge drift rather than from the physics of the Proca field.
Authors: We agree that explicit documentation of resolutions, convergence tests, and error estimates for the phase-variation suite is essential to rule out numerical artifacts. The current Numerical Methods section outlines the Einstein Toolkit infrastructure and Proca implementation but does not tabulate the specific grid parameters or present dedicated tests across relative phases. In the revised manuscript we will add a new subsection (Numerical Methods, §3.3) that (i) lists the finest-grid spacing, number of refinement levels, and domain sizes used for each relative-phase run, (ii) shows convergence of the L2 norm of the Hamiltonian constraint and of the extracted (ℓ,m)=(2,2) and (3,3) GW amplitudes for representative cases at three resolutions, and (iii) reports the estimated truncation error on remnant mass and spin. These tests will demonstrate that the qualitative distinctions in post-merger fate and the appearance of odd modes remain robust under refinement, thereby confirming that the reported behavior originates from the vector-field interference rather than from phase-dependent dissipation or gauge effects. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; results from direct numerical evolution
full rationale
The paper reports outcomes from numerical relativity simulations of eccentric mergers of equal-mass rotating m-bar=1 Proca stars. Central claims concern the impact of relative phase and orbital boost on post-merger fates (prompt black hole formation with transient remnant, hypermassive m-bar=1 star, or dynamically unstable spinning m-bar=2 star) and the excitation of odd-parity GW modes such as l=m=3. These are obtained by evolving the Einstein-Proca system under varied initial data rather than any closed analytical derivation, fitted parameter renamed as prediction, or load-bearing self-citation chain. No equations reduce the reported phenomenology to its inputs by construction; the work is self-contained against external benchmarks of the NR code and initial-data construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (2)
- initial orbital boost
- relative phase
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The dynamics of Proca stars are governed by the Einstein equations coupled to a massive vector field.
invented entities (1)
-
m-bar=2 Proca star
no independent evidence
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
5 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 ×10−16 ||H||2 µ 2 ||Mx||2 µ 2 × 100 ||My||2 µ 2 ||Mz||2 µ 2 × 10 ∆ǫ Figure 1. Difference with respect to the zero-dephase config- uration of the L2-norm of the Hamiltonian constraint (black) and of the momentum constraint ( x component in blue, y component in green and z component in red) for equal- mass Proca star mergers with ω/µ = 0 .83...
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[2]
030 Mass tµ 1 × 10−10 1 × 10−9 1 × 10−8 1 × 10−7 1 × 10−6 1 × 10−5
8 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 ∆ǫ = 0, v/c = 0. 030 Mass tµ 1 × 10−10 1 × 10−9 1 × 10−8 1 × 10−7 1 × 10−6 1 × 10−5
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[3]
030 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 6
001 −100 400 900 1400 1900 2400 2900 ∆ǫ = 0, v/c = 0. 030 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 6. Top panel: Evolution of the integrated mass on the full radial extend of the grid for model 87C0. Bottom panel: rΨ22 4 mode for the same model. The vertical dashed black line indicates the merger time (u µ ∼ 360). A. The role of the orbital angular mom...
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[4]
02 250 300 350 400 450 500 550 ǫ = 0 ǫ = π/ 4 ǫ = π/ 2 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 9. Evolution of rΨ22 4 for models 83A0a (black), 83A0b (red) and 83A0c (blue) with zero relative phase, showing that the waveforms perfectly overlap. gular momentum result in a more luminous event with more energy emitted through GW. B. The role of the compa...
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[5]
06 300 350 400 450 500 550 600 ∆ǫ = π/ 2 ∆ǫ = 3π/ 2 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 06 −0. 03 0
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[6]
06 300 350 400 450 500 550 600 ∆ǫ = 0 ∆ǫ = π Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 10. l = m = 2 modes of rΨlm 4 comparing the period- icity of the relative phase (∆ϵ) for simulation 85C0 and 85C6 (top panel) and 85C3 and 85C9 (bottom panel) equal-mass merger (ω/µ = 0.8500) comparing for periodic relative phase (∆ϵ) for initial boost of 0 .030. sion...
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[7]
06 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = 0 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 02 −0. 01 0
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[8]
02 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = 0 Re(rΨl=m=3 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 06 −0. 03 0
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06 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = π/ 3 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 02 −0. 01 0
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02 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = π/ 3 Re(rΨl=m=3 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 06 −0. 03 0
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06 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = 5π/ 6 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 02 −0. 01 0
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02 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = 5π/ 6 Re(rΨl=m=3 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 06 −0. 03 0
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06 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = π Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −0. 02 −0. 01 0
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02 300 400 500 600 700 800 ∆ǫ = π Re(rΨl=m=3 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 11. Left column: rΨ22 4 waveforms for equal-mass mergers with ω/µ = 0.87 and initial boost v/c = 0.020 (models 87B0, 87B2, 87B5 and 87B6). Right column: rΨ33 4 waveforms for the same set of models. 11 1 × 10−18 1 × 10−16 1 × 10−14 1 × 10−12 1 × 10−10 1 × 10−8 1 × 10−6 1 × 10−4 −...
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03 −0. 03 −0. 02 −0. 01 0
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03 250 300 350 400 450 500 550 600 ∆ǫ = 0 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) ∆ǫ = π Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 13. Evolution of rΨ22 4 for models 83B0 (in-phase on top panel) and 83B6 (in-phase on bottom panel), both with ω/µ = 0.83. difference between the binary components and a signa- ture of exotic physics, since equal-mass BBH mergers do not produce s...
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01 −100 150 400 650 900 1150 1400 1650 ∆ǫ = 5π/ 6 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) 0
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Formation of a hypermassive Proca star for model 87C5
8 0 250 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 ∆ǫ = 5π/ 6 Mass tµ Figure 16. Formation of a hypermassive Proca star for model 87C5. Top panel: Evolution of rΨ22 4 . Bottom panel: Evo- lution of the integrated mass on the entire spherical volume of the computational grid. The dashed black line indicates the merger time (u µ ∼ 390), while the dashed red line corre- sp...
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8700 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 17
03 −100 150 400 650 900 1150 1400 1650 1900 2150 ∆ǫ = π, ω/µ = 0. 8700 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 17. Eccentric anti-phase models may yield more than one encounter. Evolution of rΨ22 4 for models 83C6 (left) and 87C6 (right). See also Fig. 4 for an illustration of the trajectories. −0. 02 −0. 01 0
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02 −100 150 400 650 900 1150 1400 1650 1900 2150 ∆ǫ = 5π/ 6 ∆ǫ = π Re(rΨl=m=3 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) Figure 18. rΨ33 4 GW modes for models 87C5 (red solid line) and 87C6 (black solid line). system can either undergo prompt collapse to a black hole with an accreting Proca cloud (not in equilibrium), as in the case of models 87C0 and 87C3, or experience ...
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040 Re(rΨl=m=2 4 /µ ) uµ (retarded time) −1 −0
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01 0 . 1 ∆ǫ = 0 ∆ǫ = 1π/ 6 ∆ǫ = π/ 3 ∆ǫ = π/ 2 ∆ǫ = 2π/ 3 ∆ǫ = 5π/ 6 ∆ǫ = π | ˜Ψl=m=2 4 | µf /µ Figure 24. Absolute value of the Fourier transform of the l = m = 2 mode of Ψ4 for equal-mass PSs orbital merger with ω/µ = 0.8300 and initial boost v/c = 0.020 as a function of the relative phase of the two stars. much longer and even experiences a recoil kick...
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