Retarded Green's Functions In Perturbed Spacetimes For Cosmology and Gravitational Physics
Yi-Zen Chu, Glenn D. Starkman

TL;DR
This paper develops a perturbation theory for retarded Green's functions in curved spacetimes, addressing tail effects in electromagnetic and gravitational wave propagation, with implications for cosmology and black hole physics.
Contribution
It introduces a perturbative framework for calculating Green's functions in perturbed spacetimes, extending previous work and enabling analysis of light and gravitational wave propagation in complex geometries.
Findings
Derived Green's functions in perturbed Minkowski spacetime.
Computed Green's functions in weak Kerr spacetime to first order.
Lays groundwork for analyzing self-force and wave propagation in cosmology and black holes.
Abstract
Electromagnetic and gravitational radiation do not propagate solely on the null cone in a generic curved spacetime. They develop "tails," traveling at all speeds equal to and less than unity. If sizeable, this off-the-null-cone effect could mean objects at cosmological distances, such as supernovae, appear dimmer than they really are. Their light curves may be distorted relative to their flat spacetime counterparts. These in turn could affect how we infer the properties and evolution of the universe or the objects it contains. Within the gravitational context, the tail effect induces a self-force that causes a compact object orbiting a massive black hole to deviate from an otherwise geodesic path. This needs to be taken into account when modeling the gravitational waves expected from such sources. Motivated by these considerations, we develop perturbation theory for solving the massless…
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