Evolving Einstein’s field equations with matter: The “hydro without hydro” test
- 14 September 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review D
- Vol. 60 (8) , 087501
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevd.60.087501
Abstract
We include matter sources in Einstein’s field equations and show that our recently proposed 3+1 evolution scheme can stably evolve strong-field solutions. We insert in our code known matter solutions, namely the Oppenheimer-Volkoff solution for a static star and the Oppenheimer-Snyder solution for homogeneous dust sphere collapse to a black hole, and evolve the gravitational field equations. We find that we can evolve stably static, strong-field stars for arbitrarily long times and can follow dust sphere collapse accurately well past black hole formation. These tests are useful diagnostics for fully self-consistent, stable hydrodynamical simulations in 3+1 general relativity. Moreover, they suggest a successive approximation scheme for determining gravitational waveforms from strong-field sources dominated by longitudinal fields, such as binary neutron stars: approximate quasi-equilibrium models can serve as sources for the transverse field equations, which can be evolved without having to re-solve the hydrodynamical equations (“hydro without hydro”).Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fixing Einstein's EquationsPhysical Review Letters, 1999
- Treating instabilities in a hyperbolic formulation of Einstein’s equationsPhysical Review D, 1998
- Gravitational Wave Extraction and Outer Boundary Conditions by Perturbative MatchingPhysical Review Letters, 1998
- Numerical evolution of black holes with a hyperbolic formulation of general relativityPhysical Review D, 1997
- Relativistic numerical model for close neutron-star binariesPhysical Review D, 1996
- Hyperbolic reductions for Einstein's equationsClassical and Quantum Gravity, 1996
- Nonlinear wave equations for relativityPhysical Review D, 1996
- Instabilities in Close Neutron Star BinariesPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- New Formalism for Numerical RelativityPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- On the Newtonian limit of general relativityCommunications in Mathematical Physics, 1994