Soliton methods and the black hole balance problem
Abstract
This article is an extended version of a presentation given at KOZWaves 2024: The 6th Australasian Conference on Wave Science, held in Dunedin, New Zealand. Soliton methods were initially introduced to study equations such as the Korteweg--de Vries equation, which describes nonlinear water waves. Interestingly, the same methods can also be used to analyse equilibrium configurations in general relativity. An intriguing open problem is whether a relativistic n-body system can be in stationary equilibrium. Due to the nonlinear effect of spin-spin repulsion of rotating objects, and possibly considering charged bodies with additional electromagnetic repulsion, the existence of such unusual configurations remains a possibility. An important example is a (hypothetical) equilibrium configuration with n aligned black holes. By studying a linear matrix problem equivalent to the Einstein equations for axisymmetric and stationary (electro-) vacuum spacetimes, we derive the most general form of the boundary data on the symmetry axis in terms of a finite number of parameters. In the simplest case n=1, this leads to a constructive uniqueness proof of the Kerr (-Newman) solution. For n=2 and vacuum, we obtain non-existence of stationary two-black-hole configurations. For n=2 with electrovacuum, and for larger n, it remains an open problem whether the well-defined finite solution families contain any physically reasonable solutions, i.e.\ spacetimes without anomalies such as naked singularities, magnetic monopoles, and struts.
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