Relativistic tidal separation of binary stars by supermassive black holes
Luis A. Manzaneda, C\'esar O. Navarrete, Emilio Tejeda

TL;DR
This study investigates how relativistic effects influence the tidal separation of binary stars near supermassive black holes using a hybrid simulation approach, revealing significant differences from Newtonian predictions in encounter outcomes.
Contribution
The paper introduces the Hybrid Relativistic-Newtonian Approximation (HRNA) for simulating relativistic encounters, demonstrating its accuracy and impact on predictions of stellar interactions.
Findings
Relativistic simulations predict up to 30% more separation events.
Relativistic encounters lead to earlier binary separation compared to Newtonian models.
Higher likelihood of stellar collisions and binary mergers in relativistic scenarios.
Abstract
A binary stellar system that ventures too close to a supermassive black hole can become tidally separated. In this article, we investigate the role of relativistic effects in these encounters through 3-body simulations. We use the Hybrid Relativistic-Newtonian Approximation (HRNA), which combines the exact relativistic acceleration from a Schwarzschild black hole with a Newtonian description of the binary's self-gravity. This method is compared against Newtonian and Post-Newtonian (1PN) simulations. Our findings show good agreement between HRNA and 1PN results, both of which exhibit substantial differences from Newtonian simulations. This discrepancy is particularly pronounced in retrograde encounters, where relativistic simulations predict up to more separation events and an earlier onset of binary separation ( compared to in Newtonian simulations, with …
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
