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Axial instability of rotating relativistic stars

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TLDR
For axial perturbations (r-modes), initial data with negative canonical energy is found with angular dependence eim for all values of m ≥ 2 and for arbitrarily slow rotation as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
Perturbations of rotating relativistic stars can be classified by their behavior under parity. For axial perturbations (r-modes), initial data with negative canonical energy is found with angular dependence eim for all values of m ≥ 2 and for arbitrarily slow rotation. This implies instability (or marginal stability) of such perturbations for rotating perfect fluids. This low m-instability is strikingly different from the instability to polar perturbations, which sets in first for large values of m. The timescale for the axial instability appears, for small angular velocity Ω, to be proportional to a high power of Ω. As in the case of polar modes, viscosity will again presumably enforce stability except for hot, rapidly rotating neutron stars. This work complements Andersson's numerical investigation of axial modes in slowly rotating stars.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stability of a Schwarzschild Singularity

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that a Schwarzschild singularity, spherically symmetrical and endowed with mass, will undergo small vibrations about the spherical form and therefore remain stable if subjected to a small nonspherical perturbation.
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Slowly Rotating Relativistic Stars. I. Equations of Structure

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey of the state of the art in the field of cyber-physical learning.Part of the survey is presented in Table 1.1.
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A New class of unstable modes of rotating relativistic stars

TL;DR: In this article, the first numerical study of axial pulsation modes of a slowly rotating relativistic star is presented, which includes terms of first order in ≡ Ω(R3/M)1/2 1 (R is the radius, M is the mass, and Ω is the rotation frequency of the star) and accounts for effects due to the Coriolis force.
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Secular instability of rotating Newtonian stars.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the effect of gravity and viscosity on the stability of rotating self-gravitating fluids and found that all rotating stars are unstable or marginally unstable to gravitational radiation, and the corresponding stability criterion is involved the canonical energy in a rotating frame, E/sub c/,R, a functional invariant under gauge transformations associated with the trival displacements.
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Solutions of Two Problems in the Theory of Gravitational Radiation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors considered the evolution of an elongated rotating configuration by gravitational radiation and the possibility of a secular instability being induced by it, in the context of the classical homogeneous figures of Maclaurin and Jacobi.
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