Black hole perturbation theory and gravitational self-force
Adam Pound, Barry Wardell

TL;DR
This review comprehensively covers strong-field black hole perturbation theory, orbital mechanics, and gravitational self-force, introducing new methods and a complete post-adiabatic waveform-generation framework for generic Kerr orbits.
Contribution
It provides a unified, self-contained overview of key methods in black hole perturbation and self-force theories, including the first complete post-adiabatic waveform framework for Kerr orbits.
Findings
Developed a consistent presentation of perturbation methods
Summarized orbital mechanics in Kerr spacetime
Presented the first complete post-adiabatic waveform framework
Abstract
Much of the success of gravitational-wave astronomy rests on perturbation theory. Historically, perturbative analysis of gravitational-wave sources has largely focused on post-Newtonian theory. However, strong-field perturbation theory is essential in many cases such as the quasinormal ringdown following the merger of a binary system, tidally perturbed compact objects, and extreme-mass-ratio inspirals. In this review, motivated primarily by small-mass-ratio binaries but not limited to them, we provide an overview of essential methods in (i) black hole perturbation theory, (ii) orbital mechanics in Kerr spacetime, and (iii) gravitational self-force theory. Our treatment of black hole perturbation theory covers most common methods, including the Teukolsky and Regge-Wheeler-Zerilli equations, methods of metric reconstruction, and Lorenz-gauge formulations, presenting them in a new…
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