Bobbing and Kicks in Electromagnetism and Gravity
Samuel E. Gralla, Abraham I. Harte, Robert M. Wald

TL;DR
This paper investigates the phenomena of bobbing motion and kicks in binary systems with spin, using electromagnetic analogs and a formalism for extended bodies in curved spacetime, to understand their origins and implications.
Contribution
It introduces a formalism for describing extended spinning bodies in electromagnetic fields and relates these findings to gravitational binary black hole systems, clarifying the nature of bobbing and kicks.
Findings
Bobbing occurs in a simple spinning ball system in flat spacetime.
Net electromagnetic momentum exchange is stored as hidden momentum, not causing bobbing.
Kinematic spin effects, not electromagnetic interactions, cause observable bobbing.
Abstract
We study systems analogous to binary black holes with spin in order to gain some insight into the origin and nature of "bobbing" motion and "kicks" that occur in this system. Our basic tool is a general formalism for describing the motion of extended test bodies in an external electromagnetic field in curved spacetime and possibly subject to other forces. We first show that bobbing of exactly the type as observed in numerical simulations of the binary black hole system occurs in a simple system consisting of two spinning balls connected by an elastic band in flat spacetime. This bobbing may be understood as arising from the difference between a spinning body's "lab frame centroid" and its true center of mass, and is purely "kinematical" in the sense that it will appear regardless of the forces holding two spinning bodies in orbit. Next, we develop precise rules for relating the motion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExperimental and Theoretical Physics Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
