Thursday, April 28 |
07:00 - 08:45 |
Breakfast ↓ Breakfast is served daily between 7 and 9am in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
09:00 - 09:10 |
Introduction to the day (gravitational memory and quasilocal observables) (Online) |
09:10 - 09:50 |
Lydia Bieri: Gravitational Radiation in General Spacetimes ↓ Studies of gravitational waves have been devoted mostly to sources such as binary black hole mergers or neutron star mergers, or generally sources that are stationary outside of a compact set. These systems are described by asymptotically-flat manifolds solving the Einstein equations with sufficiently fast decay of the gravitational field towards Minkowski spacetime far away from the source. Waves from such sources have been recorded by the LIGO/VIRGO collaboration since 2015. In this talk, I will present new results on gravitational radiation for sources that are not stationary outside of a compact set, but whose gravitational fields decay more slowly towards infinity. A panorama of new gravitational effects opens up when delving deeper into these more general spacetimes. In particular, whereas the former sources produce memory effects that are finite and of purely electric parity, the latter in addition generate memory of magnetic type, and both types grow. These new effects emerge naturally from the Einstein equations both in the Einstein vacuum case and for neutrino radiation. The latter results are important for sources with extended neutrino halos. (Online) |
09:50 - 10:10 |
Questions and discussion (Online) |
10:10 - 10:50 |
Jose M M Senovilla: Pure gravitational energy inside an empty ball ↓ Gravity manifests itself as curvature of spacetime, and its strength can be measured by considering the variations of radius, area and volume of small balls with respect to their counterparts in flat spacetime. These variations can actually be put in relation, via the Einstein field equations, with the energy density of matter at the ball's centre. In this talk I will also consider what happens when the matter energy density vanishes. The elementary geometric quantities still feel the effect of pure gravity, leading to variations that should be related to the gravitational strength or, in simple words, to the gravitational energy density. These variations now involve terms quadratic in the curvature that can be appropriately put in connection with the Bel-Robinson tensor. New definitions of quasi-local gravitational energy arise. Some basic examples will be discussed. (Online) |
10:50 - 11:10 |
Questions and discussion (Online) |
11:10 - 11:50 |
Daniel Pook-Kolb: The ultimate fate of apparent horizons in a binary black hole merger ↓ Apparent horizons are routinely used in numerical relativity to infer properties of black holes in simulations of dynamical systems. Advances in numerical methods allowed us to follow these objects into the interior of merging black holes, revealing how the two original horizons connect (non-smoothly) with the remnant horizon. However, this still left the question of their final fate open.
In this talk, I will present our most recent results on axisymmetric head-on mergers, showing that the evolution of apparent horizons is much more intricate than previously thought: In the interior of the newly formed common horizon, the original horizons are individually annihilated by unstable horizon-like structures. This completes our picture of how two black holes become one and provides the analog of the famous pair-of-pants diagram of the event horizon now for the apparent horizon. (Online) |
11:50 - 12:10 |
Questions and discussion (Online) |
12:00 - 13:30 |
Lunch ↓ Lunch is served daily between 11:30am and 1:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
12:10 - 12:25 |
Wrap-up of the day and teaser for Friday (Online) |
15:00 - 16:30 |
Discussion round (work perspectives in gravitation) ↓ E Gasperin (chair)
JA Valiente Kroon
Claudia Moreno
Nestor Ortiz
Tonatiuh Matos (Online) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner ↓ A buffet dinner is served daily between 5:30pm and 7:30pm in Vistas Dining Room, top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |