Zoom & Whirl: Eccentric equatorial orbits around spinning black holes and their evolution under gravitational radiation reaction
Kostas Glampedakis, Daniel Kennefick

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of eccentric equatorial orbits around spinning black holes under gravitational radiation, highlighting the unique zoom-whirl behavior and its potential detectability by LISA.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed numerical analysis of eccentric orbit evolution, emphasizing the significance of zoom-whirl orbits near rapidly spinning black holes.
Findings
Eccentricity decreases during inspiral but can increase near the end for certain orbits.
Zoom-whirl orbits produce distinctive gravitational wave signatures.
High-spin black holes influence the proximity of stable and critical orbit parameters.
Abstract
We study eccentric equatorial orbits of a test-body around a Kerr black hole under the influence of gravitational radiation reaction. We have adopted a well established two-step approach: assuming that the particle is moving along a geodesic (justifiable as long as the orbital evolution is adiabatic) we calculate numerically the fluxes of energy and angular momentum radiated to infinity and to the black hole horizon, via the Teukolsky-Sasaki-Nakamura formalism. We can then infer the rate of change of orbital energy and angular momentum and thus the evolution of the orbit. The orbits are fully described by a semi-latus rectum and an eccentricity . We find that while, during the inspiral, decreases until shortly before the orbit reaches the separatrix of stable bound orbits (which is defined by ), in many astrophysically relevant cases the eccentricity will still be…
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