English

Highly accurate and efficient self-force computations using time-domain methods: Error estimates, validation, and optimization

General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology 2010-06-21 v1

Abstract

If a small "particle" of mass μM\mu M (with μ1\mu \ll 1) orbits a Schwarzschild or Kerr black hole of mass MM, the particle is subject to an \O(μ)\O(\mu) radiation-reaction "self-force". Here I argue that it's valuable to compute this self-force highly accurately (relative error of \ltsim106\ltsim 10^{-6}) and efficiently, and I describe techniques for doing this and for obtaining and validating error estimates for the computation. I use an adaptive-mesh-refinement (AMR) time-domain numerical integration of the perturbation equations in the Barack-Ori mode-sum regularization formalism; this is efficient, yet allows easy generalization to arbitrary particle orbits. I focus on the model problem of a scalar particle in a circular geodesic orbit in Schwarzschild spacetime. The mode-sum formalism gives the self-force as an infinite sum of regularized spherical-harmonic modes =0F,\reg\sum_{\ell=0}^\infty F_{\ell,\reg}, with F,\regF_{\ell,\reg} (and an "internal" error estimate) computed numerically for \ltsim30\ell \ltsim 30 and estimated for larger~\ell by fitting an asymptotic "tail" series. Here I validate the internal error estimates for the individual F,\regF_{\ell,\reg} using a large set of numerical self-force computations of widely-varying accuracies. I present numerical evidence that the actual numerical errors in F,\regF_{\ell,\reg} for different~\ell are at most weakly correlated, so the usual statistical error estimates are valid for computing the self-force. I show that the tail fit is numerically ill-conditioned, but this can be mostly alleviated by renormalizing the basis functions to have similar magnitudes. Using AMR, fixed mesh refinement, and extended-precision floating-point arithmetic, I obtain the (contravariant) radial component of the self-force for a particle in a circular geodesic orbit of areal radius r=10Mr = 10M to within 11~ppm relative error.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1006.3788,
  title  = {Highly accurate and efficient self-force computations using time-domain methods: Error estimates, validation, and optimization},
  author = {Jonathan Thornburg},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1006.3788},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

27 pages, 12 eps figures (10 of them color, but all are viewable ok in black-and-white), uses RevTeX 4.1

R2 v1 2026-06-21T15:38:22.307Z