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Phys. Rev. D 69, 124036 (2004) [26 pages]

Mergers of irrotational neutron star binaries in conformally flat gravity

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Joshua A. Faber, Philippe Grandclément*, and Frederic A. Rasio
Department of Physics and Astronomy, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208, USA

Received 21 December 2003; revised 12 April 2004; published 30 June 2004

We present the first results from our new general relativistic, Lagrangian hydrodynamics code, which treats gravity in the conformally flat (CF) limit. The evolution of fluid configurations is described using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), and the elliptic field equations of the CF formalism are solved using spectral methods in spherical coordinates. The code was tested on models for which the CF limit is exact, finding good agreement with the classical Oppenheimer-Volkov solution for a relativistic static spherical star as well as the exact semianalytic solution for a collapsing spherical dust cloud. By computing the evolution of quasiequilibrium neutron star binary configurations in the absence of gravitational radiation back reaction, we have confirmed that these configurations can remain dynamically stable all the way to the development of a cusp. With an approximate treatment of radiation reaction, we have calculated the complete merger of an irrotational binary configuration from the innermost point on an equilibrium sequence through merger and remnant formation and ringdown, finding good agreement with previous relativistic calculations. In particular, we find that mass loss is highly suppressed by relativistic effects, but that, for a reasonably stiff neutron star equation of state, the remnant is initially stable against gravitational collapse because of its strong differential rotation. The gravity wave signal derived from our numerical calculation has an energy spectrum which matches extremely well with estimates based solely on quasiequilibrium results, deviating from the Newtonian power-law form at frequencies below 1 kHz, i.e., within the reach of advanced interferometric detectors.

© 2004 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.69.124036
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.69.124036
PACS:
04.30.Db, 47.11.+j, 95.85.Sz, 97.60.Jd

*Current address: Laboratoire de Mathématiques et de Physique Théorique, Université de Tours, Parc de Grandmont, 37200 Tours, France.