In general relativity, the quadrupole formula describes the gravitational waves that are emitted from a system of masses in terms of the (mass) quadrupole moment. The formula reads

where
is the spatial part of the trace reversed perturbation of the metric, i.e. the gravitational wave.
is the gravitational constant,
the speed of light in vacuum, and
is the mass quadrupole moment.[1]
It is useful to express the gravitational wave strain in the transverse traceless gauge, by replacing the mass quadrupole moment
with the transverse traceless projection
, which is defined as:
![{\displaystyle {I}_{ij}^{TT}=\int \rho (\mathbf {x} )\left[r_{i}r_{j}-r_{n}(r_{i}n_{j}+r_{j}n_{i})+{\frac {1}{2}}r_{n}^{2}(n_{i}n_{j}+\delta _{ij})+{\frac {1}{2}}r^{2}(n_{i}n_{j}-\delta _{ij})\right]d^{3}r}](./891fcd291bc85fc4929296d1c2052b34d1f44c51.svg)
where
is a unit vector in the direction of the observer,
, and
.[2]
The total energy carried away by gravitational waves can be expressed as:

where
is the traceless mass quadrupole moment, which is given by:
![{\displaystyle {I}_{ij}^{T}=\int \rho (\mathbf {x} )\left[r_{i}r_{j}-{\frac {1}{3}}r^{2}\delta _{ij}\right]d^{3}r.}](./b99d5f145c67d729b5ce0242a7eb6b642dc5a6b1.svg)
The formula was first obtained by Albert Einstein in 1918. After a long history of debate on its physical correctness, observations of energy loss due to gravitational radiation in the Hulse–Taylor binary discovered in 1974 confirmed the result, with agreement up to 0.2 percent (by 2005).[3]
See also
References
- ^ Carroll, Sean M. (2004). Spacetime and Geometry. Pearson/Addison Wesley. pp. 300–307. ISBN 978-0805387322.
- ^ Creighton, Teviet. "Formulae and Details".
- ^ Poisson, Eric; Will, Clifford M. (2014-05-29). Gravity:Newtonian, Post-Newtonian, Relativistic. Cambridge University Press. pp. 550–563. ISBN 9781107032866.
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