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We study the influence of relativity on the chaotic properties and dynamical outcomes of an unstable triple system; the Pythagorean three-body problem. To this end, we extend the Brutus N-body code to include Post-Newtonian pairwise terms up to 2.5 order, and the first order Taylor expansion to the Einstein-Infeld-Hoffmann equations of motion. The degree to which our system is relativistic depends on the scaling of the total mass (the unit size was 1 parsec). Using the Brutus method of convergence, we test for time-reversibility in the conservative regime, and demonstrate that we are able to obtain definitive solutions to the relativistic three-body problem. It is also confirmed that the minimal required numerical accuracy for a successful time-reversibility test correlates with the amplification factor of an initial perturbation. When we take into account dissipative effects through gravitational wave emission, we find that the duration of the resonance, and the amount of exponential growth of small perturbations depend on the mass scaling. For a unit mass <= 10 MSun, the system behavior is indistinguishable from the Newtonian case, and the resonance always ends in a binary and one escaping body. For a mass scaling up to 1e7 MSun, relativity gradually becomes more prominent, but the majority of the systems still dissolve. The first mergers start to appear for a mass of ~1e5 MSun, and between 1e7 MSun and 1e9 MSun all systems end prematurely in a merger. These mergers are preceded by a gravitational wave driven in-spiral. For a mass scaling >= 1e9 MSun, all systems result in a gravitational wave merger upon the first close encounter. Relativistic three-body encounters thus provide an efficient pathway for resolving the final parsec problem. The onset of mergers at the characteristic mass scale of 1e7 MSun potentially leaves an imprint in the mass function of supermassive black holes.
We prove the stability of the critical hypersurfaces associated with the three-dimensional general relativistic Poynting-Robertson effect. The equatorial ring configures to be as a stable attractor and the whole critical hypersurface as a basin of at
Measurements of the gravitational-wave signals from neutron star mergers allow scientists to learn about the interior of neutron stars and the properties of dense nuclear matter. The study of neutron star mergers is usually performed with computation
We analyze damping of oscillations of general relativistic superfluid neutron stars. To this aim we extend the method of decoupling of superfluid and normal oscillation modes first suggested in [Gusakov & Kantor PRD 83, 081304(R) (2011)]. All calcula
Large redshift surveys of galaxies and clusters are providing the first opportunities to search for distortions in the observed pattern of large-scale structure due to such effects as gravitational redshift. We focus on non-linear scales and apply a
We present an extensive comparison between the statistical properties of non-hierarchical three-body systems and the corresponding three-body theoretical predictions. We perform and analyze 1 million realizations for each different initial condition