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Samuel E. Gralla

Researcher at University of Arizona

Publications -  73
Citations -  2295

Samuel E. Gralla is an academic researcher from University of Arizona. The author has contributed to research in topics: Black hole & General relativity. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 70 publications receiving 1773 citations. Previous affiliations of Samuel E. Gralla include Harvard University & University of Chicago.

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Motion of small bodies in classical field theory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show how prior work with R. Wald on geodesic motion in general relativity can be generalized to classical field theories of a metric and other tensor fields on four-dimensional spacetime that follow from a diffeomorphism-covariant Lagrangian.
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Inclined Pulsar Magnetospheres in General Relativity: Polar Caps for the Dipole, Quadrudipole and Beyond

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider a perfectly conducting star surrounded by a force-free magnetosphere and include the effects of general relativity and derive a general analytic formula for the polar cap shape and charge-current distribution as a function of the stellar mass, radius, rotation rate, moment of inertia, and magnetic field.
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X-ray light curves from realistic polar cap models: inclined pulsar magnetospheres and multipole fields

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a method for the extraction of the structure of the Earth's magnetic field from NASA's Earth Science Data System (ESDS) data set, which is based on the EKF.
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Pulsar Magnetospheres: Beyond the Flat Spacetime Dipole

TL;DR: In this article, the authors 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.
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Critical Exponents of Extremal Kerr Perturbations

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown 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.