4.4 Article

Implementation of higher-order absorbing boundary conditions for the Einstein equations

Journal

CLASSICAL AND QUANTUM GRAVITY
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0264-9381/26/7/075009

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Sherman Fairchild Foundation
  2. Brinson Foundation
  3. NSF [DMS-0553302, PHY-0601459, PHY-0652995, PHY 03 54842]
  4. NASA [NNG05GG52G, NNG 04GL37G]
  5. Research Fellowship at King's College Cambridge
  6. STFC [ST/F002998/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/F002998/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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We present an implementation of absorbing boundary conditions for the Einstein equations based on the recent work of Buchman and Sarbach. In this paper, we assume that spacetime may be linearized about Minkowski space close to the outer boundary, which is taken to be a coordinate sphere. We reformulate the boundary conditions as conditions on the gauge-invariant Regge-Wheeler-Zerilli scalars. Higher-order radial derivatives are eliminated by rewriting the boundary conditions as a system of ODEs for a set of auxiliary variables intrinsic to the boundary. From these we construct boundary data for a set of well-posed constraint-preserving boundary conditions for the Einstein equations in a first-order generalized harmonic formulation. This construction has direct applications to outer boundary conditions in simulations of isolated systems (e. g., binary black holes) as well as to the problem of Cauchy-perturbative matching. As a test problem for our numerical implementation, we consider linearized multipolar gravitational waves in TT gauge, with angular momentum numbers l = 2 (Teukolsky waves), 3 and 4. We demonstrate that the perfectly absorbing boundary condition B-L of order L = l yields no spurious reflections to linear order in perturbation theory. This is in contrast to the lower-order absorbing boundary conditions B-L with L < l, which include the widely used freezing-Psi(0) boundary condition that imposes the vanishing of the Newman-Penrose scalar Psi(0).

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