Non-precessional spin-orbit effects on gravitational waves from inspiraling compact binaries to second post-Newtonian order
Benjamin J. Owen (Caltech), Hideyuki Tagoshi (National Astronomical, Observatory, Mitaka, Japan), Akira Ohashi (Kyoto University)

TL;DR
This paper derives second post-Newtonian order non-precessional spin-orbit effects on gravitational waveforms from inspiraling binaries, simplifying previous calculations by using a delta-function spin description, and focusing on waveform amplitudes.
Contribution
It introduces a delta-function spin model into 2PN calculations of gravitational waveforms, extending prior 1.5PN results and focusing on amplitude corrections.
Findings
Computed 2PN amplitude contributions to gravitational waveforms.
Established that phase evolution remains unaffected until 2.5PN order.
Provided a framework for future 2.5PN phase evolution analysis.
Abstract
We derive all second post-Newtonian (2PN), non-precessional effects of spin- orbit coupling on the gravitational wave forms emitted by an inspiraling binary composed of spinning, compact bodies in a quasicircular orbit. Previous post- Newtonian calculations of spin-orbit effects (at 1.5PN order) relied on a fluid description of the spinning bodies. We simplify the calculations by introducing into post-Newtonian theory a delta-function description of the influence of the spins on the bodies' energy-momentum tensor. This description was recently used by Mino, Shibata, and Tanaka (MST) in Teukolsky-formalism analyses of particles orbiting massive black holes, and is based on prior work by Dixon. We compute the 2PN contributions to the wave forms by combining the MST energy-momentum tensor with the formalism of Blanchet, Damour, and Iyer for evaluating the binary's radiative multipoles, and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
