The relativistic Pythagorean three-body problem
Tjarda C. N. Boekholt, Arend Moerman, Simon F. Portegies Zwart

TL;DR
This study investigates how relativity affects the chaotic dynamics and outcomes of the Pythagorean three-body problem, revealing mass-dependent behaviors including gravitational wave-driven mergers and implications for supermassive black hole formation.
Contribution
The paper extends the N-body code to include relativistic effects up to 2.5 Post-Newtonian order and demonstrates definitive solutions to the relativistic three-body problem with insights into mass-dependent dynamical outcomes.
Findings
Relativity becomes significant for masses above 1e5 MSun.
Systems with mass <= 10 MSun behave Newtonian.
Mergers occur at mass scales above 1e7 MSun.
Abstract
We study the influence of relativity on the chaotic properties and dynamical outcomes of an unstable triple system; the Pythagorean three-body problem. To this end, we extend the Brutus N-body code to include Post-Newtonian pairwise terms up to 2.5 order, and the first order Taylor expansion to the Einstein-Infeld-Hoffmann equations of motion. The degree to which our system is relativistic depends on the scaling of the total mass (the unit size was 1 parsec). Using the Brutus method of convergence, we test for time-reversibility in the conservative regime, and demonstrate that we are able to obtain definitive solutions to the relativistic three-body problem. It is also confirmed that the minimal required numerical accuracy for a successful time-reversibility test correlates with the amplification factor of an initial perturbation. When we take into account dissipative effects through…
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