Is there a small straightforward equation which can give the approximate frequency of the gravitational waves emitted by the inspiral of two bodies?
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Do you mean frequency as a function of time? – ProfRob Mar 06 '17 at 16:15
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@RobJeffries More like the starting frequency from where I should look for the Gravitational wave signal assuming I was LIGO. I'm sorry if this question is trivial I am new to Gravitational waves. – user-116 Mar 06 '17 at 16:28
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I think this is possibly a duplicate of http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/174333/ – ProfRob Mar 06 '17 at 16:49
1 Answers
To leading order, the angular frequency of radial motion in a binary inspiral obeys the equation $$ \frac{d \omega}{dt} = \frac{96}{5} \left( \frac{G \mathcal{M}}{c^3} \right)^{5/3} \omega^{11/3} $$ where $\mathcal{M}$ is the so-called chirp mass, defined by $$ \mathcal{M} = \left( \frac{m_1 m_2}{(m_1 + m_2)^{1/3}} \right)^{3/5}. $$
The frequency of the gravitational wave signal will be twice the orbital frequency. That is, the observed frequency of the signal is $$ \nu = 2 \frac{\omega}{2\pi} = \frac{\omega}{\pi}. $$ You can use these equations to estimate the chirp mass of the system $\mathcal{M}$ using $\nu$ and $\dot{\nu}$, or vice versa. Given a sensible initial condition, you can solve for $\omega(t)$ or $\nu(t)$ analytically and find the evolution of the signal frequency.
Note that the differential equation for $\omega$ implies that $\omega$ increases monotonically ($\dot{\omega} > 0$). This equation also predicts that $\omega$ will diverge in finite time, which corresponds to the collision event and the end of orbital motion.
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@magma The differential equation for $\omega$ is stated explicitly in the beginning of section II C of this paper, for example. See The Classical Theory of Fields by Landau and Lifshitz for a complete treatment of the subject. – jc315 Mar 07 '17 at 22:28