Angular momentum loss in gravitational scattering, radiation reaction, and the Bondi gauge ambiguity
Gabriele Veneziano, Gregory A. Vilkovisky

TL;DR
This paper clarifies the angular momentum loss in gravitational scattering by analyzing gauge choices in the Bondi formalism, resolving puzzles about the order of radiation reaction effects and establishing a consistent framework for calculations.
Contribution
It introduces an 'intrinsic' gauge in Bondi formalism, reconciling angular momentum loss calculations with the canonical gauge and resolving existing theoretical puzzles.
Findings
The intrinsic gauge matches Damour's radiation reaction results.
Correct angular momentum flux is obtained in the canonical gauge.
The intrinsic gauge aligns with mechanical calculations of gauge-dependent quantities.
Abstract
Recently, Damour computed the radiation reaction on gravitational scattering as the (linear) response to the angular momentum loss which he found to be of in the gravitational constant. This is a puzzle because any amplitude calculation would produce both energy and angular momentum losses starting only at . Another puzzle is that the resultant radiation reaction, of , is nevertheless correct and confirmed by a number of direct calculations. We ascribe these puzzles to the BMS ambiguity in defining angular momentum. The loss of angular momentum is to be counted out from the ADM value and, therefore, should be calculated in the so-called canonical gauge under the BMS transformations in which the remote-past limit of the Bondi angular momentum coincides with the ADM angular momentum. This calculation correctly gives the loss.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
