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Black-hole scattering calculations could shed light on gravitational waves
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德国研究人员通过借鉴粒子物理学技术,开发出了一种新方法,有望加深对黑洞碰撞产生的引力波的理解。这项研究成果可能对未来引力波探测器的成功至关重要。研究人员利用世界线量子场论(WQFT)框架,简化了计算过程,并获得了迄今为止最精确的爱因斯坦场方程解。研究结果揭示了黑洞双星在引力相互作用下的关键物理性质,并首次在物理过程中发现了Calabi–Yau周期函数,为更精确的引力波模型构建提供了可能,并有望在其他物理学领域产生广泛应用。

🌌 研究的核心在于改进了对黑洞碰撞产生引力波的理解。通过借鉴粒子物理学中的数学技术,研究人员开发出了一种新方法,以提高对引力波的探测和研究能力。

💡 研究团队使用世界线量子场论(WQFT)框架,简化了计算过程。WQFT能够清晰分离经典物理和量子物理效应,从而更精确地研究天体物理观测中的经典物理效应。

💫 研究成果提供了迄今为止最精确的爱因斯坦场方程解。研究团队计算了黑洞双星在引力相互作用下的关键物理性质,包括动量变化和总辐射能量。

✨ 研究首次在物理过程中发现了Calabi–Yau周期函数。虽然这些函数在代数几何和弦理论中广为人知,但这是它们首次被用于描述真实的物理过程。

🚀 这项研究为构建更精确的引力波模型提供了可能。研究人员预测,Calabi–Yau周期函数可能在引力波之外的其他物理学领域,如对撞机物理学中得到应用。

By adapting mathematical techniques used in particle physics, researchers in Germany have developed an approach that could boost our understanding of the gravitational waves that are emitted when black holes collide. Led by Jan Plefka at The Humboldt University of Berlin, the team’s results could prove vital to the success of future gravitational-wave detectors.

Nearly a decade on from the first direct observations of gravitational waves, physicists are hopeful that the next generation of ground- and space-based observatories will soon allow us to study these ripples in space–time with unprecedented precision. But to ensure the success of upcoming projects like the LISA space mission, the increased sensitivity offered by these detectors will need to be accompanied with a deeper theoretical understanding of how gravitational waves are generated through the merging of two black holes.

In particular, they will need to predict more accurately the physical properties of gravitational waves produced by any given colliding pair and account for factors including their respective masses and orbital velocities. For this to happen, physicists will need to develop more precise solutions to the relativistic two-body problem. This problem is a key application of the Einstein field equations, which relate the geometry of space–time to the distribution of matter within it.

No exact solution

“Unlike its Newtonian counterpart, which is solved by Kepler’s Laws, the relativistic two-body problem cannot be solved exactly,” Plefka explains. “There is an ongoing international effort to apply quantum field theory (QFT) – the mathematical language of particle physics – to describe the classical two-body problem.”

In their study, Plefka’s team started from state-of-the-art techniques used in particle physics for modelling the scattering of colliding elementary particles, while accounting for their relativistic properties. When viewed from far away, each black hole can be approximated as a single point which, much like an elementary particle, carries a single mass, charge, and spin.

Taking advantage of this approximation, the researchers modified existing techniques in particle physics to create a framework called worldline quantum field theory (WQFT). “The advantage of WQFT is a clean separation between classical and quantum physics effects, allowing us to precisely target the classical physics effects relevant for the vast distances involved in astrophysical observables,” Plefka describes

Ordinarily, doing calculations with such an approach would involve solving millions of integrals that sum-up every single contribution to the black hole pair’s properties across all possible ways that the interaction between them could occur. To simplify the problem, Plefka’s team used a new algorithm that identified relationships between the integrals. This reduced the problem to just 250 “master integrals”, making the calculation vastly more manageable.

With these master integrals, the team could finally produce expressions for three key physical properties of black hole binaries within WQFT. These includes the changes in momentum during the gravity-mediated scattering of two black holes and the total energy radiated by both bodies over the course of the scattering.

Genuine physical process

Altogether, the team’s WQFT framework produced the most accurate solution to the Einstein field equations ever achieved to date. “In particular, the radiated energy we found contains a new class of mathematical functions known as ‘Calabi–Yau periods’,” Plefka explains. “While these functions are well-known in algebraic geometry and string theory, this marks the first time they have been shown to describe a genuine physical process.”

With its unprecedented insights into the structure of the relativistic two-body problem, the team’s approach could now be used to build more precise models of gravitational-wave formation, which could prove invaluable for the next generation of gravitational-wave detectors.

More broadly, however, Plefka predicts that the appearance of Calabi–Yau periods in their calculations could lead to an entirely new class of mathematical functions applicable to many areas beyond gravitational waves.

“We expect these periods to show up in other branches of physics, including collider physics, and the mathematical techniques we employed to calculate the relevant integrals will no doubt also apply there,” he says.

The research is described in Nature.

The post Black-hole scattering calculations could shed light on gravitational waves appeared first on Physics World.

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引力波 黑洞 粒子物理 量子场论 天体物理
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