Numerical relativity for D dimensional space-times: head-on collisions of black holes and gravitational wave extraction
Helvi Witek, Miguel Zilhao, Leonardo Gualtieri, Vitor Cardoso, Carlos, Herdeiro, Andrea Nerozzi, Ulrich Sperhake

TL;DR
This paper extends numerical relativity techniques to higher-dimensional spacetimes, specifically analyzing head-on black hole collisions in five dimensions and extracting gravitational wave signals relevant for high-energy physics phenomenology.
Contribution
It provides the first numerical simulation results of black hole collisions in five dimensions with detailed gravitational wave extraction using the Kodama-Ishibashi formalism.
Findings
Total radiated energy in 5D collision is ~0.089% of center of mass energy.
Radiation in 5D is slightly larger than in 4D.
Ringdown signals match perturbative predictions.
Abstract
Black objects in higher dimensional space-times have a remarkably richer structure than their four dimensional counterparts. They appear in a variety of configurations (e.g. black holes, black branes, black rings, black Saturns), and display complex stability phase diagrams. They might also play a key role in high energy physics: for energies above the fundamental Planck scale, gravity is the dominant interaction which, together with the hoop-conjecture, implies that the trans-Planckian scattering of point particles should be well described by black hole scattering. Higher dimensional scenarios with a fundamental Planck scale of the order of TeV predict, therefore, black hole production at the LHC, as well as in future colliders with yet higher energies. In this setting, accurate predictions for the production cross-section and energy loss (through gravitational radiation) in the…
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