Black Hole fusion in the extreme mass-ratio limit Roberto Emparan - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

black hole fusion in the extreme mass ratio limit
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Black Hole fusion in the extreme mass-ratio limit Roberto Emparan - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Black Hole fusion in the extreme mass-ratio limit Roberto Emparan ICREA & UBarcelona YKIS2018a Symposium YITP Kyoto 20 Feb 2018 Work with Marina Martnez arXiv:1603.00712 and with Marina Martnez & Miguel Zilho arXiv:1708.08868


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Black Hole fusion in the extreme mass-ratio limit

Roberto Emparan ICREA & UBarcelona

YKIS2018a Symposium YITP Kyoto 20 Feb 2018

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Work with Marina Martínez arXiv:1603.00712 and with Marina Martínez & Miguel Zilhão arXiv:1708.08868

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Black Hole fusion

The most complex of all processes governed by 𝑆𝜈𝜉 = 0 Non-linearity at its most fiendish

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  • r maybe not—not always

Black Hole fusion

The most complex of all processes governed by 𝑆𝜈𝜉 = 0 Non-linearity at its most fiendish

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This is what we’d see (lensing) Not a black hole, but its shadow

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What is a black hole?

Spacetime region from which not even light can escape

Event Horizon

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𝑢 𝑠 Star

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𝑢 𝑠

Spherical wavefronts contract, then expand

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Collapsed Star

singularity

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  • utgoing lightray

escapes

  • utgoing lightray

doesn’t escape lightray separatrix

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EVENT HORIZON

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Null hypersurface 3-dimensional in 4-dimensional spacetime

EVENT HORIZON

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Null hypersurface made of null geodesics

(light rays)

EVENT HORIZON

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caustic

(in general crease set)

where null geodesics enter to form part of event horizon

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Event horizon found by tracing a family of light rays in a given spacetime

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Event horizon of binary black hole fusion 𝑢

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Event horizon of binary black hole fusion

“pants” surface

lightrays that form the EH

𝑢

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Event horizon of binary black hole fusion

Cover of Science, November 10, 1995 Binary Black Hole Grand Challenge Alliance (Matzner et al)

head-on (axisymmetric) equal masses

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Spatial sections of event horizon

  • f binary black hole fusion

Owen et al, Phys.Rev.Lett. 106 (2011) 151101 Cohen et al, Phys.Rev. D85 (2012) 024031 Bohn et al, Phys.Rev. D94 (2016) 064009

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Surely the fusion of horizons can only be captured with supercomputers

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Surely the fusion of horizons can only be captured with supercomputers

  • r so it’d seem
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∃ limiting (but realistic) instance where horizon fusion can be described exactly It involves only elementary ideas and techniques

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Equivalence Principle (1907) Schwarzschild solution & Null geodesics (1916)

Kerr solution (1964)

Notion of Event Horizon (1950s/1960s)

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Extreme-Mass-Ratio (EMR) merger

𝑛 ≪ 𝑁

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𝑛 ≪ 𝑁 most often taken as

𝑁 sets the scale for the radiation emitted

𝑛 → 0

𝑁 finite

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Fusion of horizons involves scales ∼ 𝑛

𝑁 → ∞

𝑛 finite

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Dude, Where are the waves???

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Gravitational waves?

When 𝑁 → ∞ the radiation zone is pushed out to infinity No gravitational waves in this region

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Gravitational waves?

GWs will reappear if we introduce corrections for finite small

𝑛 𝑁

matched asymptotic expansion to Hamerly+Chen 2010 Hussain+Booth 2017

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𝑁 → ∞

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𝑵 → ∞

Very large black hole / Very close to the horizon

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Very close to a Black Hole Horizon well approximated by null plane in Minkowski space

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This follows from the Equivalence Principle At short enough scales, geometry is equivalent to flat Minkowski space Curvature effects become small, but horizon remains

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Locally gravity is equivalent to acceleration Locally black hole horizon is equivalent to acceleration horizon

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Falling into very large bh = crossing a null plane in Minkowski space

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Object falling into a Large Black Hole

in rest frame of infalling object

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Small Black Hole falling into a Large Black Hole

in rest frame of small black hole

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Small Black Hole falling into a Large Black Hole both are made of lightrays

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Lightrays must merge to form a pants-like surface

“oversized leg” “thin leg”

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How? EH is a family

  • f lightrays in

spacetime Small black hole: Schwarzschild/Kerr solution with finite mass 𝑛

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To find the pants surface:

Trace a family of null geodesics in the Schwarzschild/Kerr solution that approach a null plane at infinity

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All the equations you need to solve

(for Schwarzschild)

𝑢𝑟 𝑠 = න

𝑠3𝑒𝑠 (𝑠−1) 𝑠(𝑠3−𝑟2 𝑠−1 )

𝜚𝑟 𝑠 = න

𝑟𝑒𝑠 𝑠(𝑠3−𝑟2 𝑠−1 )

with appropriate final conditions: null plane at infinity

𝑟 = impact parameter

  • f lightrays at infinity

2𝑛 = 1

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Schwarzschild horizon

𝑢 𝑦 𝑨 light rays asymptoting to a plane at infinity

Null geodesics in Schwarzschild solution

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𝑢 𝑦 𝑨 light rays asymptoting to a plane at infinity

Null geodesics in Schwarzschild solution simply, integrate back in time

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light rays asymptoting to a plane at infinity

Null geodesics in Schwarzschild solution simply, integrate back in time

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“Pants” surface

big black hole small black hole

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Sequence of constant-time slices

pinch-on

𝑢 = −20𝑠0 𝑢 = −10𝑠0 𝑢 = −2𝑠0 𝑢 = −0.1𝑠0 𝑢 = 0 𝑢 = 𝑠0 𝑢 = 6𝑠0 𝑢 = 27𝑠0

𝑠

0= small horizon radius

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Preferred time-slicing

∃ timelike Killing vector Schwarzschild time Rest-frame of small black hole is well defined

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made with Mathematica in a laptop computer

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The full monty

The ultimate description of EMR mergers

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Arbitrary spins of either black hole Arbitrary relative orientations of the spins Arbitrary infall trajectories Arbitrary relative velocities

in EMR limit

𝑛 𝑁 → 0

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Large black hole rotation Relative motion in infall Just a boost

Equivalent to a rotation of the surface

Rotation and motion

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Small black hole rotation

Change Schwarzschild → Kerr Fusion of any EMR Black Hole binary in the Universe to leading order in

𝑛 𝑁 ≪ 1

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𝑏 𝑁 = 0.8

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view from above

𝑏 𝑁 = 0.9

made with Mathematica in a laptop computer

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Transient toroidal topology

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Complete characterization of fusion Precise quantitative results for:

Crease set and caustics Area increase Relaxation time Dependence on spin and relative angles Universal critical behavior at axisymmetric pinch

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Final remarks

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Simple, accurate, generic description of a process that is happening all over the Universe

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Can we observe this? Maybe not Then, what is it good for?

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Fusion of Black Hole Event Horizons is a signature phenomenon of General Relativity Equivalence Principle allows to capture and understand it easily in a (realistic) limit

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Exact construction

Benchmark for detailed numerical studies First step in expansion in

𝑛 𝑁 ≪ 1

to incorporate gravitational waves

(matched asymptotic expansion)

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Equivalence Principle magic Get 2 black holes

  • ut of a geometry with only 1

This could have been done (at least) 50 years ago!

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End

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Gravitational waves?

Quasinormal vibrations

wavelength ∼ 𝑁 : become constant wavelength ∼ 𝑛 : ℓ ∼

𝑁 𝑛 ≫ 1

localized near photon orbit at distance ∼ 𝑁 → ∞

No gravitational waves in this region

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Opening angles of cones ∼ 𝑢 1/2

Pinch-on: Criticality

∃ simple local model for pinch valid for all axisymmetric mergers

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Throat growth ∼ 𝑢

Pinch-on: Criticality

∃ simple local model for pinch valid for all axisymmetric mergers