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Published April 4, 2014 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

Self-force via Green functions and worldline integration

Abstract

A compact object moving in curved spacetime interacts with its own gravitational field. This leads to both dissipative and conservative corrections to the motion, which can be interpreted as a self-force acting on the object. The original formalism describing this self-force relied heavily on the Green function of the linear differential operator that governs gravitational perturbations. However, because the global calculation of Green functions in nontrivial black-hole spacetimes has been an open problem until recently, alternative methods were established to calculate self-force effects using sophisticated regularization techniques that avoid the computation of the global Green function.We present a method for calculating the self-force that employs the global Green function and is therefore closely modeled after the original self-force expressions. Our quantitative method involves two stages: (i) numerical approximation of the retarded Green function in the background spacetime; (ii) evaluation of convolution integrals along the worldline of the object. This novel approach can be used along arbitrary worldlines, including those currently inaccessible to more established computational techniques. Furthermore, it yields geometrical insight into the contributions to self-interaction from curved geometry (backscattering) and trapping of null geodesics. We demonstrate the method on the motion of a scalar charge in Schwarzschild spacetime. This toy model retains the physical history dependence of the self-force but avoids gauge issues and allows us to focus on basic principles. We compute the self-field and self-force for many worldlines including accelerated circular orbits, eccentric orbits at the separatrix, and radial infall. This method, closely modeled after the original formalism, provides a promising complementary approach to the self-force problem.

Additional Information

© 2014 American Physical Society. Received 17 January 2014; published 4 April. We thank Abraham Harte, Bernard Schutz, Seth Hopper, Stainslav Babak, and Jonathan Thornburg for helpful comments. A. C. O. and B.W. gratefully acknowledge support from Science Foundation Ireland under Grant No. 10/RFP/PHY2847; B.W. also acknowledges support from the John Templeton Foundation New Frontiers Program under Grant No. 37426 (University of Chicago)-FP050136-B (Cornell University). C. R. G. was supported in part by NSF Grants No. PHY-1316424, No. PHY-1068881, and CAREER Grant No. PHY- 0956189 to the Caltech and by NASA Grant No. NNX10AC69G. A. Z. was supported by NSF Grant No. PHY-1068881 and by a Sherman Fairchild Foundation grant to Caltech. The authors additionally wish to acknowledge the SFI/HEA Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC) for the provision of computational facilities and support (project ndast005b).

Attached Files

Published - PhysRevD.89.084021.pdf

Submitted - 1401.1506v1.pdf

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August 20, 2023
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October 26, 2023