Angular momentum balance in gravitational two-body scattering: Flux, memory, and supertranslation invariance
Massimiliano Maria Riva, Filippo Vernizzi, Leong Khim Wong

TL;DR
This paper resolves puzzles in gravitational two-body scattering by clarifying the physical meaning of angular momentum, leading to a supertranslation-invariant balance law that aligns with quantum field theory results.
Contribution
It introduces a new supertranslation-invariant angular momentum balance law that separates mechanical and shear contributions, clarifying previous ambiguities in flux calculations.
Findings
The radiative flux starts at O(G^3).
The static flux component starts at O(G^2).
The total angular momentum loss matches quantum field theory results up to O(G^2).
Abstract
Two puzzles continue to plague our understanding of angular momentum balance in the context of gravitational two-body scattering. First, because the standard definition of the Bondi angular momentum is subject to a supertranslation ambiguity, it has been shown that when the corresponding flux is expanded in powers of Newton's constant , it can start at either or depending on the choice of frame. This naturally raises the question as to whether the part of the flux is physically meaningful. The second puzzle concerns a set of new methods for computing the flux that were recently developed using quantum field theory. Somewhat surprisingly, it was found that they generally do not agree with the standard formula for , except in the binary's center-of-mass frame. In this paper, we show that the resolution to both of these puzzles lies in the…
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