Transition from inspiral to plunge for eccentric equatorial Kerr orbits
R. O'Shaughnessy

TL;DR
This paper extends the analysis of the inspiral-to-plunge transition in Kerr black holes to eccentric orbits, revealing that transition length varies unpredictably with initial conditions, affecting the likelihood of detection by LISA.
Contribution
It generalizes previous circular orbit models to eccentric orbits, showing the transition length depends sensitively on initial conditions, impacting gravitational wave observability.
Findings
Transition length varies unpredictably with initial conditions.
LISA's detection probability for such events is low for low-mass bodies.
Higher-mass bodies or improved noise curves could increase detection chances.
Abstract
Ori and Thorne have discussed the duration and observability (with LISA) of the transition from circular, equatorial inspiral to plunge for stellar-mass objects into supermassive () Kerr black holes. We extend their computation to eccentric Kerr equatorial orbits. Even with orbital parameters near-exactly determined, we find that there is no universal length for the transition; rather, the length of the transition depends sensitively -- essentially randomly -- on initial conditions. Still, Ori and Thorne's zero-eccentricity results are essentially an upper bound on the length of eccentric transitions involving similar bodies (e.g., fixed). Hence the implications for observations are no better: if the massive body is , the captured body has mass , and the process occurs at distance from LISA, then $S/N \lesssim (m/10…
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