Gravitational waves from pulsating stars: Evolving the perturbation equations for a relativistic star
read the original abstract
We consider the perturbations of a relativistic star as an initial-value problem. Having discussed the formulation of the problem (the perturbation equations and the appropriate boundary conditions at the centre and the surface of the star) in detail we evolve the equations numerically from several different sets of initial data. In all the considered cases we find that the resulting gravitational waves carry the signature of several of the star's pulsation modes. Typically, the fluid $f$-mode, the first two $p$-modes and the slowest damped gravitational $w$-mode are present in the signal. This indicates that the pulsation modes may be an interesting source for detectable gravitational waves from colliding neutron stars or supernovae. We also survey the literature and find several indications of mode presence in numerical simulations of rotating core collapse and coalescing neutron stars. If such mode-signals can be detected by future gravitational-wave antennae one can hope to infer detailed information about neutron stars. Since a perturbation evolution should adequately describe the late time behaviour of a dynamically excited neutron star, the present work can also be used as a bench-mark test for future fully nonlinear simulations.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Ringdown Signatures of Dehnen Dark Matter Halos: Fluid Modes and Detectability with Space-Based Detectors
Numerical ringdown waveforms for black holes in Dehnen dark matter profiles are generated and analyzed for detectability and parameter inference using second-generation TDI in space-based detectors such as LISA, Taiji...
-
Quasi-Normal Modes of Stars and Black Holes
A review summarizing the properties, calculation methods, and astrophysical relevance of quasi-normal modes for Schwarzschild, Reissner-Nordström, Kerr, Kerr-Newman black holes and non-rotating or slowly-rotating stars.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.