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Abstract
We resolve subtleties in calculating the post-Minksowskian dynamics of binary systems, as a spin expansion, from massive scattering amplitudes of fixed finite spin. In particular, the apparently ambiguous spin Casimir terms can be fully determined from the gradient of the spin-diagonal part of the amplitudes with respect to S2=−s(s+1)ℏ2, using an interpolation between massive amplitudes with different spin representations. From two-loop amplitudes of spin-0 and spin-1 particles minimally coupled to gravity, we extract the spin Casimir terms in the conservative scattering angle between a spinless and a spinning black hole at O(G3S2), finding agreement with known results in the literature. This completes an earlier study [Phys. Rev. Lett. 130 (2023), 021601] that calculated the non-Casimir terms from amplitudes. We also illustrate our methods using a model of spinning bodies in electrodynamics, finding agreement between scattering amplitude predictions and classical predictions in a root-Kerr electromagnetic background up to O(α3S2). For both gravity and electrodynamics, the finite part of the amplitude coincides with the two-body radial action in the aligned spin limit, generalizing the amplitude-action relation beyond the spinless case. Surprisingly, the two-loop amplitude displays a hidden spin-shift symmetry in the probe limit, which was previously observed at one loop. We conjecture that the symmetry holds to all orders in the coupling constant and is a consequence of integrability of Kerr orbits in the probe limit at the first few orders in spin.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of High Energy Physics |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 25 Dec 2024 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- Scattering Amplitudes
- Classical Theories of Gravity
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Dive into the research topics of 'Spinning Black Hole Scattering at O(G3S2): Casimir Terms, Radial Action and Hidden Symmetry'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
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Scattering amplitudes and applications to precision QCD and gravitational waves
1/08/21 → 31/12/25
Project: Research