Nearly extremal apparent horizons in simulations of merging black holes
Geoffrey Lovelace, Mark A. Scheel, Robert Owen, Matthew Giesler, Reza, Katebi, Bela Szilagyi, Tony Chu, Nicholas Demos, Daniel A. Hemberger,, Lawrence E. Kidder, Harald P. Pfeiffer, and Nousha Afshari

TL;DR
This study investigates the extremality of apparent horizons in merging black holes, finding they are close to extremal but not surpassing the theoretical bounds, with new simulations reaching high spin values.
Contribution
The paper introduces new simulations of merging black holes with high spins and develops a gauge-invariant extremality bound to assess horizon extremality.
Findings
Common horizons are nearly extremal just after formation.
The extremality parameter approaches but does not exceed the extremal limit.
Superextremal surfaces can exist temporarily within certain initial data.
Abstract
The spin angular momentum of an isolated Kerr black hole is bounded by the surface area of its apparent horizon: , with equality for extremal black holes. In this paper, we explore the extremality of individual and common apparent horizons for merging, rapidly spinning binary black holes. We consider simulations of merging black holes with equal masses and initial spin angular momenta aligned with the orbital angular momentum, including new simulations with spin magnitudes up to . We measure the area and (using approximate Killing vectors) the spin on the individual and common apparent horizons, finding that the inequality is satisfied in all cases but is very close to equality on the common apparent horizon at the instant it first appears. We also introduce a gauge-invariant lower bound on the extremality by computing the smallest…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlack Holes and Theoretical Physics · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
