Center-of-mass angular momentum and memory effect in asymptotically flat spacetimes
David A. Nichols

TL;DR
This paper introduces the center-of-mass (CM) memory effect in gravitational waves, explores its theoretical properties, and calculates its magnitude for binary systems, expanding understanding of gravitational-wave memory phenomena.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes a new type of gravitational-wave memory effect related to the CM angular momentum in asymptotically flat spacetimes, including its invariance and flux expressions.
Findings
CM memory effect is related to changes in the CM part of angular momentum.
The effect appears at third and fourth post-Newtonian order for binary systems.
The effect is invariant under supertranslation symmetries.
Abstract
Gravitational-wave (GW) memory effects are constant changes in the GW strain and its time integrals, which are closely connected to changes in the charges that characterize asymptotically flat spacetimes. The first GW memory effect discovered was a lasting change in the GW strain. It can occur when GWs or massless fields carry away 4-momentum from an isolated source. Subsequently, it was shown that fluxes of intrinsic angular momentum can generate a new type of memory effect called the spin memory, which is an enduring change in a portion of the time integral of the GW strain. In this paper, we note that there is another new type of memory effect. We call it the center-of-mass (CM) memory effect, because it is related to changes in the CM part of the angular momentum of a spacetime. We first examine a few properties of the CM angular momentum. Specifically, we describe how it transforms…
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