Constants of motion in stationary axisymmetric gravitational fields
Abstract
The motion of test particles in stationary axisymmetric gravitational fields is generally nonintegrable unless a nontrivial constant of motion, in addition to energy and angular momentum along the symmetry axis, exists. The Carter constant in Kerr-de Sitter spacetime is the only example known to date. Proposed astrophysical tests of the black-hole no-hair theorem have often involved integrable gravitational fields more general than the Kerr family, but the existence of such fields has been a matter of debate. To elucidate this problem, we treat its Newtonian analogue by systematically searching for nontrivial constants of motion polynomial in the momenta and obtain two theorems. First, solving a set of quadratic integrability conditions, we establish the existence and uniqueness of the family of stationary axisymmetric potentials admitting a quadratic constant. As in Kerr-de Sitter spacetime, the mass moments of this class satisfy a "no-hair" recursion relation M2l+2=a2 M2l, and the constant is Noether-related to a second-order Killing-St\"ackel tensor. Second, solving a new set of quartic integrability conditions, we establish nonexistence of quartic constants. Remarkably, a subset of these conditions is satisfied when the mass moments obey a generalized "no-hair" recursion relation M2l+4=(a2+b2)M2l+2-a2b2 M2l. The full set of quartic integrability conditions, however, cannot be satisfied nontrivially by any stationary axisymmetric vacuum potential.
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