Gravitational Scattering of Compact Bodies from Worldline Quantum Field Theory
Gustav Uhre Jakobsen

TL;DR
This paper develops a worldline quantum field theory approach to analyze classical two-body gravitational interactions involving spinning compact objects, providing new calculations of scattering observables and gravitational radiation at high perturbative orders.
Contribution
It introduces novel second and third post-Minkowskian order results for spinning bodies, including gravitational bremsstrahlung, impulse, and spin kick, using the WQFT framework.
Findings
Computed gravitational bremsstrahlung waveform for spinning bodies.
Derived impulse and spin kick at third post-Minkowskian order.
Presented a conservative Hamiltonian consistent with radiation-reaction relations.
Abstract
In this work the worldline quantum field theory (WQFT) approach to computing observables of the classical general relativistic two-body system is presented. Compact bodies such as black holes or neutron stars are described in an effective field theory by worldline fields with spin degrees of freedom efficiently described by anti-commuting Grassmann variables. Novel results of the WQFT include the gravitational bremsstrahlung at second post-Minkowskian order and the impulse and spin kick at third post-Minkowskian order all at quadratic order in spins. Next, the WQFT is presented with a comprehensive discussion of its in-in Schwinger-Keldysh formulation, its Feynman rules and graph generation and its on-shell one-point functions which are directly related to the scattering observables of unbound motion. Here, we present the second post-Minkowskian quadratic-in-spin contributions to its…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
