Accretion-driven gravitational radiation from nonrotating compact objects. Infalling quadrupolar shells
Alessandro Nagar, Guillermo Diaz, Jose A. Pons, Jose A. Font

TL;DR
This study uses numerical simulations to analyze gravitational waves emitted by non-rotating compact objects during accretion, revealing complex spectra influenced more by accretion dynamics than by the objects' normal modes.
Contribution
It introduces a hybrid simulation approach combining linearized perturbation evolution with nonlinear hydrodynamics to study accretion-induced gravitational radiation.
Findings
Black hole spectra show interference fringes and multiple frequencies.
Neutron star spectra excite fundamental modes distinctly.
Accretion dynamics significantly influence gravitational wave signals.
Abstract
This paper reports results from numerical simulations of the gravitational radiation emitted from non--rotating compact objects(both neutron stars and Schwarzschild black holes) as a result of the accretion of matter. A hybrid procedure is adopted: we evolve, in axisymmetry, the linearized equations describing metric and fluid perturbations, coupled with a nonlinear hydrodynamics code that calculates the motion of the accreting matter. The initial matter distribution is shaped in the form of extended quadrupolar shells of dust or perfect fluid. Self--gravity and radiation reaction effects of the accreting fluid are neglected. This idealized setup is used to understand the qualitative features appearing in the energy spectrum of the gravitational wave emission from compact stars or black holes, subject to accretion processes involving extended objects. A comparison for the case of…
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