Resonant self-force effects in extreme-mass-ratio binaries: A scalar model
Zachary Nasipak, Charles R. Evans

TL;DR
This paper models the scalar self-force effects during resonances in extreme-mass-ratio inspirals using a simplified scalar field approach, providing insights into the orbital evolution and testing a conjecture about conservative effects.
Contribution
It introduces a scalar self-force calculation method for resonant orbits in Kerr spacetime and tests the integrability conjecture regarding conservative effects during resonances.
Findings
Scalar self-force varies with initial phase at resonance entry.
Conservative effects contribute to the evolution of the Carter constant.
Uncertainties are primarily due to regularization residuals.
Abstract
Extreme-mass ratio inspirals (EMRIs), compact binaries with small mass ratios , will be important sources for low-frequency gravitational wave detectors. Almost all EMRIs will evolve through important transient orbital resonances, which will enhance or diminish their gravitational wave flux, thereby affecting the phase evolution of the waveforms at relative to leading order. While modeling the local gravitational self-force (GSF) during resonances is essential for generating accurate EMRI waveforms, so far the full GSF has not been calculated for an -resonant orbit owing to computational demands of the problem. As a first step we employ a simpler model, calculating the scalar self-force (SSF) along -resonant geodesics in Kerr spacetime. We demonstrate two ways of calculating the -resonant SSF (and likely GSF), with…
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