I have came across a few works in gravitational physics using the term "DC" without further explanation of its meaning. For example, consider Strominger's 1703.05448, which states in p. 2 about the memory effect that
This is a subtle DC effect, in which the passage of gravitational waves produces a permanent shift in the relative positions of a pair of inertial detectors.
And a bit later, in the same page,
The former is a statement about momentum space poles in scattering amplitudes, while the latter concerns a DC shift in asymptotic data between late and early times.
In p. 78, we once again have
Integrating this equation reveals a DC effect.
On a completely different topic, consider the reference gr-qc/9301015 by Penrose, Sorkin, and Woolgar (PSW hereafter). In p. 12 it is said that
The function $m^{\mu\nu}$ describes what will be called the DC part of the asymptotic metric
and on the following page we get
They are weak enough to encompass, for example, the DC fields and radiation emitted by any astrophysically plausible source we know of.
A Living Review by Luc Blanchet says, in p. 21, that
It is therefore essentially a zero-frequency effect (or DC effect), which has rather poor observational consequences in the case of the LIGO-VIRGO detectors [...]
So what precisely is the meaning of "DC" in gravitational physics? From the above excerpts, especially the last one, I am guessing "DC" is jargon for "zero frequency", in reference to the idea of "direct current" having no oscillations in electromagnetism. So maybe the use by PSW means that the fields and terms they are characterizing as "DC" are the non-oscillatory contributions, such as the Coulomb-like term of the gravitational field.
Is this understanding precise? In more generality, what is the meaning of "DC" in gravitational physics?