Massive black hole binaries are predicted to form during the hierarchical assembly of cosmic structures and will represent the loudest sources of low-frequency gravitational waves (GWs) detectable by present and forthcoming GW experiments. Before entering the GW-driven regime, their evolution is driven by the interaction with the surrounding stars and gas. While stellar interactions are found to always shrink the binary, recent studies predict the possibility of binary outspiral mediated by the presence of a gaseous disk, which could endlessly delay the coalescence and impact the merger rates of massive binaries. Here we implement a semianalytical treatment that follows the binary evolution under the combined effect of stars and gas. We find that binaries may outspiral only if they accrete near or above their Eddington limit and only until their separation reaches the gaseous disk self-gravitating radius. Even in case of an outspiral, the binary eventually reaches a large enough mass for GW to take over and drive it to coalescence. The combined action of stellar hardening, mass growth, and GW-driven inspiral brings binaries to coalescence in a few hundreds of megayears at most, implying that gas-driven expansion will not severely affect the detection prospects of upcoming GW facilities.

Bortolas, E., Franchini, A., Bonetti, M., Sesana, A. (2021). The Competing Effect of Gas and Stars in the Evolution of Massive Black Hole Binaries. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, 918(1) [10.3847/2041-8213/ac1c0c].

The Competing Effect of Gas and Stars in the Evolution of Massive Black Hole Binaries

Bortolas E.
Primo
;
Franchini A.
Secondo
;
Bonetti M.
Penultimo
;
Sesana A.
Ultimo
2021

Abstract

Massive black hole binaries are predicted to form during the hierarchical assembly of cosmic structures and will represent the loudest sources of low-frequency gravitational waves (GWs) detectable by present and forthcoming GW experiments. Before entering the GW-driven regime, their evolution is driven by the interaction with the surrounding stars and gas. While stellar interactions are found to always shrink the binary, recent studies predict the possibility of binary outspiral mediated by the presence of a gaseous disk, which could endlessly delay the coalescence and impact the merger rates of massive binaries. Here we implement a semianalytical treatment that follows the binary evolution under the combined effect of stars and gas. We find that binaries may outspiral only if they accrete near or above their Eddington limit and only until their separation reaches the gaseous disk self-gravitating radius. Even in case of an outspiral, the binary eventually reaches a large enough mass for GW to take over and drive it to coalescence. The combined action of stellar hardening, mass growth, and GW-driven inspiral brings binaries to coalescence in a few hundreds of megayears at most, implying that gas-driven expansion will not severely affect the detection prospects of upcoming GW facilities.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Supermassive black holes; Stellar dynamics; Gravitational wave sources; Galaxy accretion disks; Computational astronomy
English
27-ago-2021
2021
918
1
L15
none
Bortolas, E., Franchini, A., Bonetti, M., Sesana, A. (2021). The Competing Effect of Gas and Stars in the Evolution of Massive Black Hole Binaries. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, 918(1) [10.3847/2041-8213/ac1c0c].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/325675
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