Computing gravitational waves from slightly nonspherical stellar collapse to a black hole: Odd-parity perturbation

Tomohiro Harada, Hideo Iguchi, and Masaru Shibata
Phys. Rev. D 68, 024002 – Published 1 July 2003
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Abstract

Nonspherical stellar collapse to a black hole is one of the most promising gravitational wave sources for gravitational wave detectors. We numerically study gravitational waves from a slightly nonspherical stellar collapse to a black hole in linearized Einstein theory. We adopt a spherically collapsing star as the zeroth-order solution and gravitational waves are computed using perturbation theory on the spherical background. In this paper we focus on the perturbation of odd-parity modes. Using the polytropic equations of state with polytropic indices np=1 and 3, we qualitatively study gravitational waves emitted during the collapse of neutron stars and supermassive stars to black holes from a marginally stable equilibrium configuration. Since the matter perturbation profiles can be chosen arbitrarily, we provide a few types for them. For np=1, the gravitational waveforms are mainly characterized by a black hole quasinormal mode ringing, irrespective of perturbation profiles given initially. However, for np=3, the waveforms depend strongly on the initial perturbation profiles. In other words, the gravitational waveforms strongly depend on the stellar configuration and, in turn, on the ad hoc choice of the functional form of the perturbation in the case of supermassive stars.

  • Received 3 February 2003

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.68.024002

©2003 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Tomohiro Harada*

  • Department of Physics, Waseda University, Shinjuku, Tokyo 169-8555, Japan

Hideo Iguchi

  • Department of Physics, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan

Masaru Shibata

  • Department of Earth Science and Astronomy, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, University of Tokyo, Meguro, Tokyo 153-8902, Japan

  • *Electronic address:harada@gravity.phys.waseda.ac.jp
  • Electronic address:iguchi@th.phys.titech.ac.jp
  • Electronic address:shibata@provence.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp

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Vol. 68, Iss. 2 — 15 July 2003

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