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      Choreographic solution to the general relativistic three-body problem

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          Abstract

          We revisit the three-body problem in the framework of general relativity. The Newtonian N-body problem admits choreographic solutions, where a solution is called choreographic if every massive particles move periodically in a single closed orbit. One is a stable figure-eight orbit for a three-body system, which was found first by Moore (1993) and re-discovered with its existence proof by Chenciner and Montgomery (2000). In general relativity, however, the periastron shift prohibits a binary system from orbiting in a single closed curve. Therefore, it is unclear whether general relativistic effects admit a choreographic solution such as the figure eight. We carefully examine general relativistic corrections to initial conditions so that an orbit for a three-body system can be closed and a figure eight. This solution is still choreographic. This illustration suggests that the general relativistic N-body problem also may admit a certain class of choreographic solutions.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2007-02-14
          2007-04-15
          Article
          10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.201102
          gr-qc/0702076
          4395cdb9-8713-4885-a4ec-ad2f4551e17a
          History
          Custom metadata
          Phys.Rev.Lett.98:201102,2007
          10 pages, 4 figures, text improved, accepted for publication in PRL
          gr-qc astro-ph math.DS nlin.CD

          General relativity & Quantum cosmology,Differential equations & Dynamical systems,General astrophysics,Nonlinear & Complex systems

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