Self force via m-mode regularization and 2+1D evolution: Foundations and a scalar-field implementation on Schwarzschild
Abstract
To model the radiative evolution of extreme mass-ratio binary inspirals (a key target of the LISA mission), the community needs efficient methods for computation of the gravitational self-force (SF) on the Kerr spacetime. Here we further develop a practical `m-mode regularization' scheme for SF calculations, and give details of a first implementation. The key steps in the method are (i) removal of a singular part of the perturbation field with a suitable `puncture' to leave a sufficiently regular residual within a finite worldtube surrounding the particle's worldline, (ii) decomposition in azimuthal (m-)modes, (iii) numerical evolution of the m-modes in 2+1D with a finite difference scheme, and (iv) reconstruction of the SF from the mode sum. The method relies on a judicious choice of puncture, based on the Detweiler--Whiting decomposition. We give a working definition for the `order' of the puncture, and show how it determines the convergence rate of the m-mode sum. The dissipative piece of the SF displays an exponentially convergent mode sum, while the m-mode sum for the conservative piece converges with a power law. In the latter case the individual modal contributions fall off at large m as m-n for even n and as m-n+1 for odd n, where n is the puncture order. We describe an m-mode implementation with a 4th-order puncture to compute the scalar-field SF along circular geodesics on Schwarzschild. In a forthcoming companion paper we extend the calculation to the Kerr spacetime.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.