Alternatives to standard puncture initial data for binary black hole evolution
George Reifenberger, Wolfgang Tichy

TL;DR
This paper investigates three alternative initial data schemes for binary black hole simulations, aiming to reduce spurious radiation and produce more realistic gravitational wave signals compared to standard puncture data.
Contribution
It introduces two post-Newtonian based initial data methods that incorporate gravitational waves and evaluates their effectiveness in binary black hole evolutions.
Findings
Two alternative schemes produce quasicircular orbits and gravitational radiation from the start.
The second scheme failed to produce realistic orbits due to extrinsic curvature inaccuracies.
All alternatives show more eccentricity and larger constraint violations than standard puncture data.
Abstract
Standard puncture initial data have been widely used for numerical binary black hole evolutions despite their shortcomings, most notably the inherent lack of gravitational radiation at the initial time that is later followed by a burst of spurious radiation. We study the evolution of three alternative initial data schemes. Two of the three alternatives are based on post-Newtonian expansions that contain realistic gravitational waves. The first scheme is based on a second-order post-Newtonian expansion in Arnowitt, Deser, and Misner transverse-traceless (ADMTT) gauge that has been resummed to approach standard puncture data at the black holes. The second scheme is based on asymptotic matching of the 4-metrics of two tidally perturbed Schwarzschild solutions to a first-order post-Newtonian expansion in ADMTT gauge away from the black holes. The final alternative is obtained through…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Superconducting Materials and Applications
