Black-hole quasinormal resonances: Wave analysis versus a geometric-optics approximation
Shahar Hod

TL;DR
This paper compares wave-based and geometric-optics methods for calculating black-hole quasinormal modes, confirming that the null geodesic approximation accurately predicts the spectrum for near-extremal Kerr black holes.
Contribution
It validates the geometric-optics approximation by directly solving the Teukolsky wave equation and showing agreement with null ray predictions.
Findings
Wave analysis confirms null geodesic approximation accuracy.
Spectrum matches between wave and geometric-optics methods.
Applicable to near-extremal Kerr black holes.
Abstract
It has long been known that null unstable geodesics are related to the characteristic modes of black holes-- the so called quasinormal resonances. The basic idea is to interpret the free oscillations of a black hole in the eikonal limit in terms of null particles trapped at the unstable circular orbit and slowly leaking out. The real part of the complex quasinormal resonances is related to the angular velocity at the unstable null geodesic. The imaginary part of the resonances is related to the instability timescale (or the inverse Lyapunov exponent) of the orbit. While this geometric-optics description of the black-hole quasinormal resonances in terms of perturbed null {\it rays} is very appealing and intuitive, it is still highly important to verify the validity of this approach by directly analyzing the Teukolsky wave equation which governs the dynamics of perturbation {\it waves} in…
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