Blocking low-eccentricity EMRIs: A statistical direct-summation N-body study of the Schwarzschild barrier
Patrick Brem, Pau Amaro-Seoane, Carlos F. Sopuerta

TL;DR
This study uses extensive N-body simulations with relativistic effects to confirm the Schwarzschild barrier, showing it suppresses low-eccentricity EMRIs and influences gravitational wave detection predictions.
Contribution
First direct-summation N-body simulation incorporating geodesic relativistic orbits to quantify the Schwarzschild barrier's impact on EMRI rates.
Findings
Schwarzschild barrier prevents low-eccentricity EMRIs from approaching the MBH.
High-eccentricity EMRIs are unaffected by the barrier and dominate detections.
Predicted that eLISA will mainly detect high-eccentricity EMRIs.
Abstract
The capture of a compact object in a galactic nucleus by a massive black hole (MBH), an extreme-mass ratio inspiral (EMRI), is the best way to map space and time around it. Recent work on stellar dynamics has demonstrated that there seems to be a complot in phase space acting on low-eccentricity captures, since their rates decrease significantly by the presence of a blockade in the rate at which orbital angular momenta change takes place. This so-called "Schwarzschild barrier" is a result of the impact of relativistic precession on to the stellar potential torques, and thus it affects the enhancement on lower-eccentricity EMRIs that one would expect from resonant relaxation. We confirm and quantify the existence of this barrier using a statistical sample of 2,500 direct-summation N-body simulations using both a post-Newtonian and also for the first time in a direct-summation code a…
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