A fully relativistic radial fall
Alessandro D.A.M. Spallicci, Patxi Ritter

TL;DR
This paper investigates the effects of the self-force on radial fall trajectories in a relativistic context, comparing geodesic and self-consistent corrected motions, revealing inward self-force influence and subtle trajectory differences.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent method for incorporating the self-force into radial fall trajectories, enhancing understanding of back-action effects in relativistic gravity.
Findings
Self-force pushes the falling body inward, contrary to some expectations.
Higher maximum coordinate velocity observed due to self-force effects.
Differences between geodesic and self-force corrected trajectories are subtle but noticeable.
Abstract
Radial fall has historically played a momentous role. It is one of the most classical problems, the solutions of which represent the level of understanding of gravitation in a given epoch. A {\it gedankenexperiment} in a modern frame is given by a small body, like a compact star or a solar mass black hole, captured by a supermassive black hole. The mass of the small body itself and the emission of gravitational radiation cause the departure from the geodesic path due to the back-action, that is the self-force. For radial fall, as any other non-adiabatic motion, the instantaneous identity of the radiated energy and the loss of orbital energy cannot be imposed and provide the perturbed trajectory. In the first part of this letter, we present the effects due to the self-force computed on the geodesic trajectory in the background field. Compared to the latter trajectory, in the…
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