scholarly journals Faithful effective-one-body waveforms of small-mass-ratio coalescing black hole binaries

2007 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Thibault Damour ◽  
Alessandro Nagar
Author(s):  
Jianwei Mei ◽  
Yan-Zheng Bai ◽  
Jiahui Bao ◽  
Enrico Barausse ◽  
Lin Cai ◽  
...  

Abstract TianQin is a planned space-based gravitational wave (GW) observatory consisting of three Earth-orbiting satellites with an orbital radius of about $10^5 \, {\rm km}$. The satellites will form an equilateral triangle constellation the plane of which is nearly perpendicular to the ecliptic plane. TianQin aims to detect GWs between $10^{-4} \, {\rm Hz}$ and $1 \, {\rm Hz}$ that can be generated by a wide variety of important astrophysical and cosmological sources, including the inspiral of Galactic ultra-compact binaries, the inspiral of stellar-mass black hole binaries, extreme mass ratio inspirals, the merger of massive black hole binaries, and possibly the energetic processes in the very early universe and exotic sources such as cosmic strings. In order to start science operations around 2035, a roadmap called the 0123 plan is being used to bring the key technologies of TianQin to maturity, supported by the construction of a series of research facilities on the ground. Two major projects of the 0123 plan are being carried out. In this process, the team has created a new-generation $17 \, {\rm cm}$ single-body hollow corner-cube retro-reflector which was launched with the QueQiao satellite on 21 May 2018; a new laser-ranging station equipped with a $1.2 \, {\rm m}$ telescope has been constructed and the station has successfully ranged to all five retro-reflectors on the Moon; and the TianQin-1 experimental satellite was launched on 20 December 2019—the first-round result shows that the satellite has exceeded all of its mission requirements.


2010 ◽  
Vol 104 (21) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos O. Lousto ◽  
Hiroyuki Nakano ◽  
Yosef Zlochower ◽  
Manuela Campanelli

2017 ◽  
Vol 96 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Kavanagh ◽  
Donato Bini ◽  
Thibault Damour ◽  
Seth Hopper ◽  
Adrian C. Ottewill ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 922 (1) ◽  
pp. 40
Author(s):  
Fani Dosopoulou ◽  
Jenny E. Greene ◽  
Chung-Pei Ma

Abstract The binding energy liberated by the coalescence of supermassive black hole (SMBH) binaries during galaxy mergers is thought to be responsible for the low density cores often found in bright elliptical galaxies. We use high-resolution N-body and Monte Carlo techniques to perform single and multistage galaxy merger simulations and systematically study the dependence of the central galaxy properties on the binary mass ratio, the slope of the initial density cusps, and the number of mergers experienced. We study both the amount of depleted stellar mass (or mass deficit), M def, and the radial extent of the depleted region, r b. We find that r b ≃ r SOI and that M def varies in the range of 0.5–4M •, with r SOI the influence radius of the remnant SMBH and M • its mass. The coefficients in these relations depend weakly on the binary mass ratio and remain remarkably constant through subsequent mergers. We conclude that the core size and mass deficit do not scale linearly with the number of mergers, making it hard to infer merger histories from observations. On the other hand, we show that both M def and r b are sensitive to the morphology of the galaxy merger remnant, and that adopting spherical initial conditions, as done in early work, leads to misleading results. Our models reproduce the range of values for M def found in most observational work, but span nearly an order-of magnitude range around the true ejected stellar mass.


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