Conservative corrections to the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) of a Kerr black hole: a new gauge-invariant post-Newtonian ISCO condition, and the ISCO shift due to test-particle spin and the gravitational self-force
Marc Favata

TL;DR
This paper introduces a gauge-invariant post-Newtonian ISCO condition that accurately reproduces known ISCO properties for Kerr and Schwarzschild black holes, and calculates shifts due to test-particle spin and self-force effects.
Contribution
It generalizes the Blanchet-Iyer ISCO condition to spinning binaries, accurately reproduces Kerr and Schwarzschild ISCOs, and computes ISCO shifts from spin and self-force effects.
Findings
Exact reproduction of Schwarzschild and Kerr ISCOs in the test-mass limit.
Accurate calculation of ISCO shifts due to test-particle spin.
Agreement with relativistic predictions for self-force effects.
Abstract
The innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) delimits the transition from circular orbits to those that plunge into a black hole. In the test-mass limit, well-defined ISCO conditions exist for the Kerr and Schwarzschild spacetimes. In the finite-mass case, there are a large variety of ways to define an ISCO in a post-Newtonian (PN) context. Here I generalize the gauge-invariant ISCO condition of Blanchet & Iyer (2003) to the case of spinning (nonprecessing) binaries. The Blanchet-Iyer ISCO condition has two desirable and unexpected properties: (1) it exactly reproduces the Schwarzschild ISCO in the test-mass limit, and (2) it accurately approximates the recently-calculated shift in the Schwarzschild ISCO frequency due to the conservative-piece of the gravitational self-force [Barack & Sago (2009)]. The generalization of this ISCO condition to spinning binaries has the property that it…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
