Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of boxes
- Preface
- 1 Foundations of Newtonian gravity
- 2 Structure of self-gravitating bodies
- 3 Newtonian orbital dynamics
- 4 Minkowski spacetime
- 5 Curved spacetime
- 6 Post-Minkowskian theory: Formulation
- 7 Post-Minkowskian theory: Implementation
- 8 Post-Newtonian theory: Fundamentals
- 9 Post-Newtonian theory: System of isolated bodies
- 10 Post-Newtonian celestial mechanics, astrometry and navigation
- 11 Gravitational waves
- 12 Radiative losses and radiation reaction
- 13 Alternative theories of gravity
- References
- Index
12 - Radiative losses and radiation reaction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of boxes
- Preface
- 1 Foundations of Newtonian gravity
- 2 Structure of self-gravitating bodies
- 3 Newtonian orbital dynamics
- 4 Minkowski spacetime
- 5 Curved spacetime
- 6 Post-Minkowskian theory: Formulation
- 7 Post-Minkowskian theory: Implementation
- 8 Post-Newtonian theory: Fundamentals
- 9 Post-Newtonian theory: System of isolated bodies
- 10 Post-Newtonian celestial mechanics, astrometry and navigation
- 11 Gravitational waves
- 12 Radiative losses and radiation reaction
- 13 Alternative theories of gravity
- References
- Index
Summary
In Chapters 8, 9, and 10 we examined gravitational phenomena that take place in the near zone, the region of space which contains the source of the gravitational field, and which is confined to a radius R that is much smaller than λc, the characteristic wavelength of the emitted radiation. This near-zone physics excluded radiative phenomena, and the dynamics of the system was entirely conservative. In Chapter 11 we moved to the wave zone, situated at a distance R that is much larger than λc, and studied the gravitational waves produced by processes taking place in the near zone; this wave-zone physics is all about radiative phenomena. In the first part of this chapter we continue our exploration of wave-zone physics by describing how gravitational waves transport energy, momentum, and angular momentum away from their source. These radiative losses imply that the near-zone physics cannot be strictly conservative, and in the second part of the chapter we identify the radiation-reaction forces which produce the required dissipation within the system. This chapter, therefore, is all about the linkage between the near and wave zones.
Radiative losses and radiation reaction are subtle topics in general relativity, and the mathematical description of these phenomena is technically demanding. To ease our entry into this subject, in Sec. 12.1 we first review the situation in the simpler context of flat-spacetime electromagnetism. We return to gravity in Sec. 12.2, in which we develop a general description of radiative losses in general relativity.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- GravityNewtonian, Post-Newtonian, Relativistic, pp. 624 - 698Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014