Forced motion near black holes
Jonathan R. Gair, Eanna E. Flanagan, Steve Drasco, Tanja Hinderer and, Stanislav Babak

TL;DR
This paper introduces two methods for integrating forced geodesic equations in Kerr spacetime, demonstrating their application to inspirals with gas-like drag forces and analyzing the effects on orbital eccentricity.
Contribution
The paper presents two novel methods for evolving forced geodesics in Kerr spacetime using osculating orbits, accommodating arbitrary forces and providing tools for non-vacuum inspiral modeling.
Findings
Drag causes eccentricity to increase during inspiral.
Both methods yield consistent results for simple forces.
Increasing eccentricity indicates non-vacuum environment presence.
Abstract
We present two methods for integrating forced geodesic equations in the Kerr spacetime, which can accommodate arbitrary forces. As a test case, we compute inspirals under a simple drag force, mimicking the presence of gas. We verify that both methods give the same results for this simple force. We find that drag generally causes eccentricity to increase throughout the inspiral. This is a relativistic effect qualitatively opposite to what is seen in gravitational-radiation-driven inspirals, and similar to what is observed in hydrodynamic simulations of gaseous binaries. We provide an analytic explanation by deriving the leading order relativistic correction to the Newtonian dynamics. If observed, an increasing eccentricity would provide clear evidence that the inspiral was occurring in a non-vacuum environment. Our two methods are especially useful for evolving orbits in the adiabatic…
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