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The Hawking mass for ellipsoidal 2-surfaces in Minkowski and Schwarzschild spacetimesHansevi, Daniel January 2008 (has links)
<p>In general relativity, the nature of mass is non-local. However, an appropriate def-inition of mass at a quasi-local level could give a more detailed characterization ofthe gravitational field around massive bodies. Several attempts have been made tofind such a definition. One of the candidates is the Hawking mass. This thesispresents a method for calculating the spin coefficients used in the expression for theHawking mass, and gives a closed-form expression for the Hawking mass of ellipsoidal2-surfaces in Minkowski spacetime. Furthermore, the Hawking mass is shown to havethe correct limits, both in Minkowski and Schwarzschild, along particular foliationsof leaves approaching a metric 2-sphere. Numerical results for Schwarzschild are alsopresented.</p>
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Spatially-homogeneous Vlasov-Einstein dynamicsOkabe, Takahide 05 October 2012 (has links)
The influence of matter described by the Vlasov equation, on the evolution of anisotropy in the spatially-homogeneous universes, called the Bianchi cosmologies, is studied. Due to the spatial-homogeneity, the Einstein equations for each Bianchi Type are reduced to a set of coupled ordinary differential equations, which has Hamiltonian form with the metric components being the canonical coordinates. In the vacuum Bianchi cosmologies, it is known that a curvature potential, which comes from the symmetries of the three-dimensional Lie groups, determines the basic properties of the evolution of anisotropy. In this work, matter potentials are constructed for Vlasov matter. They are obtained by first introducing a new matter action principle for the Vlasov equation, in terms of a conjugate pair of functions, and then enforcing the symmetry to obtain a reduction. This yields an expression for the matter potential in terms of the phase space density, which is further reduced by assuming cold streaming matter. Some vacuum Bianchi cosmologies and Type I with Vlasov matter are compared. It is shown that the Vlasov-matter potential for cold streaming matter results in qualitatively distinct dynamics from the well-known vacuum Bianchi cosmologies. / text
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Constrained evolution in numerical relativityAnderson, Matthew William 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Computational and astrophysical studies of black hole spacetimesBonning, Erin Wells 28 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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Conformal symmetries in special and general relativity : the derivation and interpretation of conformal symmetries and asymptotic conformal symmetries in Minkowski space-time and in some space-times of general relativityGriffin, G. K. January 1976 (has links)
The central objective of this work is to present an analysis of the asymptotic conformal Killing vectors in asymptotically-flat space-times of general relativity. This problem has been examined by two different methods; in Chapter 5 the asymptotic expansion technique originated by Newman and Unti [31] leads to a solution for asymptotically-flat spacetimes which admit an asymptotically shear-free congruence of null geodesics, and in Chapter 6 the conformal rescaling technique of Penrose [54] is used both to support the findings of the previous chapter and to set out a procedure for solution in the general case. It is pointed out that Penrose's conformal technique is preferable to the use of asymptotic expansion methods, since it can be established in a rigorous manner without leading to the possible convergence difficulties associated with asymptotic expansions. Since the asymptotic conformal symmetry groups of asymptotically flat space-times Are generalisations of the conformal group of Minkowski space-time we devote Chapters 3 and 4 to a study of the flat space case so that the results of later chapters may receive an interpretation in terms of familiar concepts. These chapters fulfil a second, equally important, role in establishing local isomorphisms between the Minkowski-space conformal group, 90(2,4) and SU(2,2). The SO(2,4) representation has been used by Kastrup [61] to give a physical interpretation using space-time gauge transformations. This appears as part of the survey of interpretative work in Chapter 7. The SU(2,2) representation of the conformal group has assumed a theoretical prominence in recent years. through the work of Penrose [9-11] on twistors. In Chapter 4 we establish contact with twistor ideas by showing that points in Minkowski space-time correspond to certain complex skew-symmetric rank two tensors on the SU(2,2) carrier space. These objects are, in Penrose's terminology [91, simple skew-symmetric twistors of valence [J. A particularly interesting aspect of conformal objects in space-time is explored in Chapter 8, where we extend the work of Geroch [16] on multipole moments of the Laplace equation in 3-space to the consideration. of Q tý =0 in Minkowski space-time. This development hinges upon the fact that multipole moment fields are also conformal Killing tensors. In the final chapter some elementary applications of the results of Chapters 3 and 5 are made to cosmological models which have conformal flatness or asymptotic conformal flatness. In the first class here we have 'models of the Robertson-Walker type and in the second class we have the asymptotically-Friedmann universes considered by Hawking [73].
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On gravitational wave modeling: numerical relativity data analysis, the excitation of kerr quasinormal modes, and the unsupervised machine learning of waveform morphologyLondon, Lionel 21 September 2015 (has links)
The expectation that light waves are the only way to gather information about the distant
universe dominated scientific thought, without serious alternative, until Einstein’s 1916
proposal that gravitational waves are generated by the dynamics of massive objects. Now,
after nearly a century of speculation, theoretical development, observational support, and
finally, tremendous experimental preparation, there are good reasons to believe that we will
soon directly detect gravitational waves. One of the most important of these good reasons
is the fact that matched filtering enables us to dig gravitational wave signals out of noisy
data, if we have prior information about the signal’s morphology. Thus, at the interface of
Numerical Relativity simulation, and data analysis for experiment, there is a central effort
to model likely gravitational wave signals. In this context, I present my contributions to
the modeling of Gravitational Ringdown (Kerr Quasinormal Modes). Specifically by ap-
propriately interfacing black hole perturbation theory with Numerical Relativity, I present
the first robust models for Quasinormal Mode excitation. I present the first systematic de-
scription of Quasinormal Mode overtones in simulated binary black hole mergers. I present
the first systematic description of nonlinear Quasinormal Mode excitation in simulated bi-
nary black hole mergers. Lastly, it is suggested that by analyzing the phase of black hole
Quasinormal Modes, we may learn information about the black hole’s motion with respect
to the line of sight. Moreover, I present ongoing work at the intersection of gravitational
wave modeling and machine learning. This work shows promise for the automated and near
optimal placement of Numerical Relativity simulations concurrent with the near optimal
linear modeling of gravitational output.
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Integrable Nonlinear Relativistic EquationsHadad, Yaron January 2013 (has links)
This work focuses on three nonlinear relativistic equations: the symmetric Chiral field equation, Einstein's field equation for metrics with two commuting Killing vectors and Einstein's field equation for diagonal metrics that depend on three variables. The symmetric Chiral field equation is studied using the Zakharov-Mikhailov transform, with which its infinitely many local conservation laws are derived and its solitons on diagonal backgrounds are studied. It is also proven that it is equivalent to a novel equation that poses a fascinating similarity to the Sinh-Gordon equation. For the 1+1 Einstein equation the Belinski-Zakharov transformation is explored. It is used to derive explicit formula for N gravitational solitons on arbitrary diagonal background. In particular, the method is used to derive gravitational solitons on the Einstein-Rosen background. The similarities and differences between the attributes of the solitons of the symmetric Chiral field equation and those of the 1+1 Einstein equation are emphasized, and their origin is pointed out. For the 1+2 Einstein equation, new equations describing diagonal metrics are derived and their compatibility is proven. Different gravitational waves are studied that naturally extend the class of Bondi-Pirani-Robinson waves. It is further shown that the Bondi-Pirani-Robinson waves are stable with respect to perturbations of the spacetime. Their stability is closely related to the stability of the Schwarzschild black hole and the relation between the two allows to conjecture about the stability of a wide range of gravitational phenomena. Lastly, a new set of equations that describe weak gravitational waves is derived. This new system of equations is closely and fundamentally connected with the nonlinear Schrödinger equation and can be properly called the nonlinear Schrödinger-Einstein equations. A few preliminary solutions are constructed.
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The Suitability of Hybrid Waveforms for Advanced Gravitational Wave DetectorsMacDonald, Ilana 13 January 2014 (has links)
The existence of Gravitational Waves from binary black holes is one of the most interesting predictions of General Relativity. These ripples in space-time should be visible to ground-based gravitational wave detectors worldwide in the next few years. One such detector, the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) is in the process of being upgraded to its Advanced sensitivity which should make gravitational wave detections routine. Even so, the signals that LIGO will detect will be faint compared to the detector noise, and so accurate waveform templates are crucial. In this thesis, we present a detailed analysis of the accuracy of hybrid gravitational waveforms. Hybrids are created by stitching a long post-Newtonian inspiral to the late inspiral, merger, and ringdown produced by numerical relativity simulations. We begin our investigation with a study of the systematic errors in the numerical waveform, and errors due to hybridization and choice of detector noise. For current NR waveforms, the largest source of error comes from the unknown high-order terms in the post-Newtonian waveform, which we first explore for equal-mass, non-spinning binaries, and also for unequal-mass, non-spinning binaries. We then consider the potential reduction in hybrid errors if these higher-order terms were known. Finally, we investigate the possibility of using hybrid waveforms as a detection template bank and integrating NR+PN hybrids into the LIGO detection pipeline.
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Radiating solutions with heat flow in general relativity.Govender, Megandren. January 1994 (has links)
In this thesis we model spherically symmetric radiating stars dissipating energy in
the form of a radial heat flux. We assume that the spacetime for the interior matter
distribution is shear-free. The junction conditions necessary for the matching of the
exterior Vaidya solution to an interior radiating line element are obtained. In particular
we show that the pressure at the boundary of the star is nonvanishing when the
star is radiating (Santos 1985). The junction conditions, with a nonvanishing cosmological
constant, were obtained. This generalises the results of Santos (1985) and we
believe that this is an original result. The Kramer (1992) model is reviewed in detail
and extended. The evolution of this model depends on a function of time which has
to satisfy a nonlinear second order differential equation. We solve this differential
equation in general and thereby completely describe the temporal behaviour of the
Kramer model. Graphical representations of the thermodynamical and gravitational
variables are generated with the aid of the software package MATHEMATICA Version
2.0 (Wolfram 1991). We also analyse two other techniques to generate exact
solutions to the Einstein field equations for modelling radiating stars. In the first
case the particle trajectories are assumed to be geodesics. We indicate how the model
of Kolassis et al (1988) may be extended by providing an ansatz to solve a second
order differential equation. In the second case we review the models of de Oliveira
et al (1985, 1986, 1988) where the gravitational potentials are separable functions of
the spatial and temporal coordinates. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, 1994.
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Volume-Preserving Coordinate Gauges in Linear Perturbation TheoryHerman, David Leigh 21 December 2012 (has links)
The main goal of this thesis is to present cosmological perturbation theory (based on the standard Friedmann cosmological model) in volume-preserving coordinates, which then provides a suitable basis for studies in cosmological averaging. We review perturbation theory to second order, allowing for averaging to second order in future research. To solve the averaging problem we need a method of covariantly and gauge invariantly averaging tensorial objects on a background manifold. This is a very difficult problem. However, the definition of an average takes on a particularly simple form when written in a system of volume-preserving coordinates. Therefore, we develop a three dimensional and a four dimensional volume-preserving coordinate gauge in this thesis that can be used for averaging in cosmological perturbation theory.
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