Abstract
The article reviews the current status of a theoretical approach to the problem of the emission of gravitational waves by isolated systems in the context of general relativity. Part A of the article deals with general post-Newtonian sources. The exterior field of the source is investigated by means of a combination of analytic post-Minkowskian and multipolar approximations. The physical observables in the far-zone of the source are described by a specific set of radiative multipole moments. By matching the exterior solution to the metric of the post-Newtonian source in the near-zone we obtain the explicit expressions of the source multipole moments. The relationships between the radiative and source moments involve many nonlinear multipole interactions, among them those associated with the tails (and tails-of-tails) of gravitational waves. Part B of the article is devoted to the application to compact binary systems. We present the equations of binary motion, and the associated Lagrangian and Hamiltonian, at the third post-Newtonian (3PN) order beyond the Newtonian acceleration. The gravitational-wave energy flux, taking consistently into account the relativistic corrections in the binary moments as well as the various tail effects, is derived through 3.5PN order with respect to the quadrupole formalism. The binary’s orbital phase, whose prior knowledge is crucial for searching and analyzing the signals from inspiralling compact binaries, is deduced from an energy balance argument.
Highlights
The theory of gravitational radiation from isolated sources, in the context of general relativity, is a fascinating science that can be explored by means of what was referred to in the XVIIIth century France as l’analyse sublime: The analytical method, and the resolution of partial differential equations
Inspiralling compact binaries are ideally suited for application of a high-order post-Newtonian wave generation formalism. These systems are very relativistic, with orbital velocities as high as 0.5c in the last rotations, so it is not surprising that the quadrupole-moment formalism (2) – (6) constitutes a poor description of the emitted gravitational waves, since many post-Newtonian corrections are expected to play a substantial role. This expectation has been confirmed by measurement-analyses [139, 137, 198, 138, 393, 346, 350, 284, 157], which have demonstrated that the post-Newtonian precision needed to implement successfully the optimal filtering technique for the LIGO/VIRGO detectors corresponds grossly, in the case of neutron-star binaries, to the 3PN approximation, or 1/c6 beyond the quadrupole moment approximation
The problem of the motion and gravitational radiation of compact objects in post-Newtonian approximations is of crucial importance, for at least three reasons listed in the Introduction of this article: Motion of N planets in the solar system; gravitational radiation reaction force in binary pulsars; direct detection of gravitational waves from inspiralling compact binaries
Summary
The theory of gravitational radiation from isolated sources, in the context of general relativity, is a fascinating science that can be explored by means of what was referred to in the XVIIIth century France as l’analyse sublime: The analytical (i.e., mathematical) method, and the resolution of partial differential equations. The importance of the field lies in the exciting comparison of the theory with contemporary astrophysical observations, of binary pulsars like the historical Hulse–Taylor pulsar PSR 1913+16 [250], and, in a forthcoming future, of gravitational waves produced by massive and rapidly evolving systems such as inspiralling compact binaries These should be routinely detected on Earth by the network of large-scale laser interferometers, including the advanced versions of the ground-based interferometers LIGO and VIRGO, with GEO and the future cryogenic detector KAGRA. The space-based laser interferometer LISA (the evolved version eLISA) should be able to detect supermassive black-hole binaries at cosmological distances To prepare these experiments, the required theoretical work consists of carrying out a sufficiently general solution of the Einstein field equations, valid for a large class of matter systems, and describing the physical processes of the emission and propagation of the gravitational waves from the source to the distant detector, as well as their back-reaction onto the source. In applications we generally show the most up-to-date results up to the highest known post-Newtonian order.
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