We define the mass and current multipole moments for an arbitrary theory of gravity in terms of canonical Noether charges associated with specific residual transformations in canonical harmonic gauge, which we call multipole symmetries. We show that our definition exactly matches Thorne’s mass and current multipole moments in Einstein gravity, which are defined in terms of metric components. For radiative configurations, the total multipole charges — including the contributions from the source and the radiation — are given by surface charges at spatial infinity, while the source multipole moments are naturally identified by surface integrals in the near-zone or, alternatively, from a regularization of the Noether charges at null infinity. T...
Mass and electric multipole moments are defined for electrostatic space-tu11es according to the form...
The relativistic time-dependent multipole expansion for electromagnetism and linearized gravity in t...
Restricted Access. An open access version is available at arXiv.org.(one of the alternative location...
Abstract We define the mass and current multipole moments for an arbitrary theory of gravity in term...
The most general vacuum solution to Einstein's field equations with no incoming radiation can be con...
Abstract It is shown that conserved charges associated with a specific subclass of gauge symmetries ...
A procedure is proposed for construction of the gravitational multipoles. The full metric is given i...
Stationary, asymptotically flat spacetimes in general relativity can be characterized by their multi...
We transform the metric of an isolated matter source in the multipolar post-Minkowskian approximatio...
This paper brings together, into a single unified notation, the multipole formalisms for gravitation...
International audienceWe consider a broad family of higher-derivative extensions of four-dimensional...
A method is presented which allows the exact construction of conserved (i.e. divergence-free) curren...
Abstract In our previous work, we proposed an algorithm to transform the metric of an isolated matte...
We study multipole expansion of the momentum currents in hadrons with three series $S^{(J)}, \tilde{...
A general formulation of the relativistic multipole moments in axistationary electrovac spacetimes i...
Mass and electric multipole moments are defined for electrostatic space-tu11es according to the form...
The relativistic time-dependent multipole expansion for electromagnetism and linearized gravity in t...
Restricted Access. An open access version is available at arXiv.org.(one of the alternative location...
Abstract We define the mass and current multipole moments for an arbitrary theory of gravity in term...
The most general vacuum solution to Einstein's field equations with no incoming radiation can be con...
Abstract It is shown that conserved charges associated with a specific subclass of gauge symmetries ...
A procedure is proposed for construction of the gravitational multipoles. The full metric is given i...
Stationary, asymptotically flat spacetimes in general relativity can be characterized by their multi...
We transform the metric of an isolated matter source in the multipolar post-Minkowskian approximatio...
This paper brings together, into a single unified notation, the multipole formalisms for gravitation...
International audienceWe consider a broad family of higher-derivative extensions of four-dimensional...
A method is presented which allows the exact construction of conserved (i.e. divergence-free) curren...
Abstract In our previous work, we proposed an algorithm to transform the metric of an isolated matte...
We study multipole expansion of the momentum currents in hadrons with three series $S^{(J)}, \tilde{...
A general formulation of the relativistic multipole moments in axistationary electrovac spacetimes i...
Mass and electric multipole moments are defined for electrostatic space-tu11es according to the form...
The relativistic time-dependent multipole expansion for electromagnetism and linearized gravity in t...
Restricted Access. An open access version is available at arXiv.org.(one of the alternative location...