Uniqueness of collinear solutions for the relativistic three-body problem
Kei Yamada, Hideki Asada

TL;DR
This paper proves the uniqueness of relativistic collinear solutions in the three-body problem, showing only one physically valid solution exists and analyzing differences from Newtonian solutions in length and angular velocity.
Contribution
It establishes the uniqueness of relativistic collinear solutions and characterizes their properties compared to Newtonian counterparts.
Findings
Only one physically reasonable root for the distance ratio exists.
Relativistic configurations have smaller angular velocity than Newtonian ones.
Relativistic end-to-end length is shorter than Newtonian length.
Abstract
Continuing work initiated in an earlier publication [Yamada, Asada, Phys. Rev. D 82, 104019 (2010)], we investigate collinear solutions to the general relativistic three-body problem. We prove the uniqueness of the configuration for given system parameters (the masses and the end-to-end length). First, we show that the equation determining the distance ratio among the three masses, which has been obtained as a seventh-order polynomial in the previous paper, has at most three positive roots, which apparently provide three cases of the distance ratio. It is found, however, that, even for such cases, there exists one physically reasonable root and only one, because the remaining two positive roots do not satisfy the slow motion assumption in the post-Newtonian approximation and are thus discarded. This means that, especially for the restricted three-body problem, exactly three positions of…
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