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Dive into the research topics where Samuel E. Gralla is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel E. Gralla.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Spacetime approach to force-free magnetospheres

Samuel E. Gralla; Ted Jacobson

Force-Free Electrodynamics (FFE) describes magnetically dominated relativistic plasma via non-linear equations for the electromagnetic field alone. Such plasma is thought to play a key role in the physics of pulsars and active black holes. Despite its simple covariant formulation, FFE has primarily been studied in 3+1 frameworks, where spacetime is split into space and time. In this article we systematically develop the theory of force-free magnetospheres taking a spacetime perspective. Using a suite of spacetime tools and techniques (notably exterior calculus) we cover 1) the basics of the theory, 2) exact solutions that demonstrate the extraction and transport of the rotational energy of a compact object (in the case of a black hole, the Blandford-Znajek mechanism), 3) the behavior of current sheets, 4) the general theory of stationary, axisymmetric magnetospheres and 5) general properties of pulsar and black hole magnetospheres. We thereby synthesize, clarify and generalize known aspects of the physics of force-free magnetospheres, while also introducing several new results.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2013

Exact Solutions to Force-Free Electrodynamics in Black Hole Backgrounds

T. Daniel Brennan; Samuel E. Gralla; Ted Jacobson

A shared property of several of the known exact solutions to the equations of force-free electrodynamics is that their charge-current four-vector is null. We examine the general properties of null-current solutions and then focus on the principal congruences of the Kerr black hole spacetime. We obtain a large class of exact solutions, which are in general time-dependent and non-axisymmetric. These solutions include waves that, surprisingly, propagate without scattering on the curvature of the black hole?s background. They may be understood as generalizations to Robinson?s solutions to vacuum electrodynamics associated with a shear-free congruence of null geodesics. When stationary and axisymmetric, our solutions reduce to those of Menon and Dermer, the only previously known solutions in Kerr. In Kerr, all of our solutions have null electromagnetic fields ( and E2 = B2). However, in Schwarzschild or flat spacetime there is freedom to add a magnetic monopole field, making the solutions magnetically dominated (B2 > E2). This freedom may be used to reproduce the various flat-spacetime and Schwarzschild-spacetime (split) monopole solutions available in the literature (due to Michel and later authors), and to obtain a large class of time-dependent, non-axisymmetric generalizations. These generalizations may be used to model the magnetosphere of a conducting star that rotates with arbitrary prescribed time-dependent rotation axis and speed. We thus significantly enlarge the class of known exact solutions, while organizing and unifying previously discovered solutions in terms of their null structure.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

PULSAR MAGNETOSPHERES: BEYOND THE FLAT SPACETIME DIPOLE

Samuel E. Gralla; Alexandru Lupsasca; Alexander A. Philippov

Most studies of the pulsar magnetosphere have assumed a pure magnetic dipole in flat spacetime. However, recent work suggests that the effects of general relativity are in fact of vital importance and that realistic pulsar magnetic fields will have a significant nondipolar component. We introduce a general analytical method for studying the axisymmetric force-free magnetosphere of a slowly-rotating star of arbitrary magnetic field, mass, radius and moment of inertia, including all the effects of general relativity. We confirm that spacelike current is generically present in the polar caps (suggesting a pair production region), irrespective of the stellar magnetic field. We show that general relativity introduces a ~60% correction to the formula for the dipolar component of the surface magnetic field inferred from spindown. Finally, we show that the location and shape of the polar caps can be modified dramatically by even modestly strong higher moments. This can affect emission processes occurring near the star and may help explain the modified beam characteristics of millisecond pulsars.


Physical Review D | 2016

Horizon instability of extremal Kerr black holes: Nonaxisymmetric modes and enhanced growth rate

Marc Casals; Samuel E. Gralla; Peter Zimmerman

We show that the horizon instability of the extremal Kerr black hole is associated with a singular branch point in the Green function at the superradiant bound frequency. We study generic initial data supported away from the horizon and find an enhanced growth rate due to nonaxisymmetric modes. The growth is controlled by the conformal weight


Physical Review D | 2016

Transient Instability of Rapidly Rotating Black Holes

Samuel E. Gralla; Aaron Zimmerman; Peter Zimmerman

h


Physical Review D | 2016

Electromagnetic Jets from Stars and Black Holes

Samuel E. Gralla; Alexandru Lupsasca; Maria J. Rodriguez

of each mode. We speculate on connections to near-extremal black holes and holographic duality.


Physical Review D | 2014

On the Magnetosphere of an Accelerated Pulsar

T. Daniel Brennan; Samuel E. Gralla

NSF [PHY-1506027]; Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics; Government of Canada through Industry Canada; Province of Ontario through the Ministry of Economic Development Innovation


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2018

Critical Exponents of Extremal Kerr Perturbations

Samuel E. Gralla; Peter Zimmerman

We present analytic force-free solutions modeling rotating stars and black holes immersed in the magnetic field of a thin disk that terminates at an inner radius. The solutions are exact in flat spacetime and approximate in Kerr spacetime. The compact object produces a conical jet whose properties carry information about its nature. For example, the jet from a star is surrounded by a current sheet, while that of a black hole is smooth. We compute an effective resistance in each case and compare to the canonical values used in circuit models of energy extraction. These solutions illustrate all of the basic features of the Blandford-Znajek process for energy extraction and jet formation in a clean setting.


Physical Review D | 2015

Note on bunching of field lines in black hole magnetospheres

Samuel E. Gralla; Alexandru Lupsasca; Maria J. Rodriguez

We report on a remarkable class of exact solutions to force-free electrodynamics that has four-current along the light cones of an arbitrary timelike worldline in flat spacetime. No symmetry is assumed, and the solutions are given in terms of a free function of three variables. The field configuration should describe the outer magnetosphere of a pulsar moving on the worldline. The power radiated is the sum of an acceleration (Larmor-type) term and a pulsar-type term.


Physical Review D | 2015

Nonaxisymmetric Poynting jets

Samuel E. Gralla; Ted Jacobson

We show that scalar, electromagnetic, and gravitational perturbations of extremal Kerr black holes are asymptotically self-similar under the near-horizon, late-time scaling symmetry of the background metric. This accounts for the Aretakis instability (growth of transverse derivatives) as a critical phenomenon associated with the emergent symmetry. We compute the critical exponent of each mode, which is equivalent to its decay rate. It follows from symmetry arguments that, despite the growth of transverse derivatives, all generally covariant scalar quantities decay to zero.

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Scott A. Hughes

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Achilleas P. Porfyriadis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Alan G. Wiseman

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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