The geometry of a naked singularity created by standing waves near a Schwarzschild horizon, and its application to the binary black hole problem
Ilya Mandel

TL;DR
This paper investigates how standing gravitational waves near a Schwarzschild horizon can destroy the horizon, creating a naked singularity, and explores the implications for modeling binary black hole gravitational waves using a scalar field analogy.
Contribution
It introduces a scalar-field model to analyze horizon destruction by standing waves and assesses the approximation's accuracy for binary black hole wave predictions.
Findings
Standing waves destroy the black hole horizon.
The naked singularity closely resembles a black hole.
Downgoing waves from the model match true black hole waves.
Abstract
The most promising way to compute the gravitational waves emitted by binary black holes (BBHs) in their last dozen orbits, where post-Newtonian techniques fail, is a quasistationary approximation introduced by Detweiler and being pursued by Price and others. In this approximation the outgoing gravitational waves at infinity and downgoing gravitational waves at the holes' horizons are replaced by standing waves so as to guarantee that the spacetime has a helical Killing vector field. Because the horizon generators will not, in general, be tidally locked to the holes' orbital motion, the standing waves will destroy the horizons, converting the black holes into naked singularities that resemble black holes down to near the horizon radius. This paper uses a spherically symmetric, scalar-field model problem to explore in detail the following BBH issues: (i) The destruction of a horizon by…
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