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Deformed Schwarzschild horizons in second-order perturbation theory: mass, geometry, and teleology

Deformed Schwarzschild horizons in second-order perturbation theory: mass, geometry, and teleology
Deformed Schwarzschild horizons in second-order perturbation theory: mass, geometry, and teleology
In recent years, gravitational-wave astronomy has motivated increasingly accurate perturbative studies of gravitational dynamics in compact binaries. This in turn has enabled more detailed analyses of the dynamical black holes in these systems. For example, Pound et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 021101 (2020)] recently computed the surface area of a Schwarzschild black hole’s apparent horizon, perturbed by an orbiting body, to second order in the binary’s mass ratio. In this paper, we take that as the starting point for a comprehensive study of a perturbed Schwarzschild black hole’s apparent and event horizon at second perturbative order, deriving generic formulas for the first and second-order corrections to the horizons’ radial profiles, surface areas, Hawking masses, and intrinsic curvatures. We find that the two horizons are remarkably similar, and that any teleological behavior of the event horizon is suppressed in several ways. Critically, we establish that at all orders, the perturbed event horizon in a small-mass-ratio binary is effectively localized in time. Even more pointedly, the event horizon is identical to the apparent horizon at linear order regardless of the source of perturbation, implying that the seemingly teleological “tidal lead”, previously observed in linearly perturbed event horizons, is not genuinely teleological in origin. The two horizons do generically differ at second order, but their Hawking masses remain identical, implying that the event horizon obeys the same energy-flux balance law as the apparent horizon. At least in the case of a binary system, the difference between their surface areas remains extremely small even in the late stages of inspiral. In the course of our analysis, we also numerically illustrate puzzling behaviour in the black hole’s motion around the binary’s center of mass.
1550-7998
Bonetto, Riccardo
611e17e0-33b8-43fb-b1af-bd8cabac8399
Pound, Adam
5aac971a-0e07-4383-aff0-a21d43103a70
Sam, Zeyd
7e12967f-2eca-4e15-ad32-17454d40aede
Bonetto, Riccardo
611e17e0-33b8-43fb-b1af-bd8cabac8399
Pound, Adam
5aac971a-0e07-4383-aff0-a21d43103a70
Sam, Zeyd
7e12967f-2eca-4e15-ad32-17454d40aede

Bonetto, Riccardo, Pound, Adam and Sam, Zeyd (2021) Deformed Schwarzschild horizons in second-order perturbation theory: mass, geometry, and teleology. Physical Review D. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

In recent years, gravitational-wave astronomy has motivated increasingly accurate perturbative studies of gravitational dynamics in compact binaries. This in turn has enabled more detailed analyses of the dynamical black holes in these systems. For example, Pound et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 021101 (2020)] recently computed the surface area of a Schwarzschild black hole’s apparent horizon, perturbed by an orbiting body, to second order in the binary’s mass ratio. In this paper, we take that as the starting point for a comprehensive study of a perturbed Schwarzschild black hole’s apparent and event horizon at second perturbative order, deriving generic formulas for the first and second-order corrections to the horizons’ radial profiles, surface areas, Hawking masses, and intrinsic curvatures. We find that the two horizons are remarkably similar, and that any teleological behavior of the event horizon is suppressed in several ways. Critically, we establish that at all orders, the perturbed event horizon in a small-mass-ratio binary is effectively localized in time. Even more pointedly, the event horizon is identical to the apparent horizon at linear order regardless of the source of perturbation, implying that the seemingly teleological “tidal lead”, previously observed in linearly perturbed event horizons, is not genuinely teleological in origin. The two horizons do generically differ at second order, but their Hawking masses remain identical, implying that the event horizon obeys the same energy-flux balance law as the apparent horizon. At least in the case of a binary system, the difference between their surface areas remains extremely small even in the late stages of inspiral. In the course of our analysis, we also numerically illustrate puzzling behaviour in the black hole’s motion around the binary’s center of mass.

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Accepted/In Press date: 7 December 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 453245
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/453245
ISSN: 1550-7998
PURE UUID: 84385a7e-5e50-44d5-8cb2-3c319d6bd519
ORCID for Adam Pound: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9446-0638

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Date deposited: 11 Jan 2022 17:46
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:27

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Contributors

Author: Riccardo Bonetto
Author: Adam Pound ORCID iD
Author: Zeyd Sam

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