Astrophysics > High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
[Submitted on 6 Jun 2016 (v1), last revised 5 Oct 2016 (this version, v2)]
Title:Massive Black Hole Binary Mergers in Dynamical Galactic Environments
View PDFAbstract:Gravitational Waves (GW) have now been detected from stellar-mass black hole binaries, and the first observations of GW from Massive Black Hole (MBH) Binaries are expected within the next decade. Pulsar Timing Arrays (PTA), which can measure the years long periods of GW from MBHB, have excluded many standard predictions for the amplitude of a stochastic GW Background (GWB). We use coevolved populations of MBH and galaxies from hydrodynamic, cosmological simulations ('Illustris') to calculate a predicted GWB. The most advanced predictions so far have included binary hardening mechanisms from individual environmental processes. We present the first calculation including all of the environmental mechanisms expected to be involved: dynamical friction, stellar 'loss-cone' scattering, and viscous drag from a circumbinary disk. We find that MBH binary lifetimes are generally multiple gigayears, and only a fraction coalesce by redshift zero. For a variety of parameters, we find all GWB amplitudes to be below the most stringent PTA upper limit of $A_{\textrm{yr}^{-1}} \approx 10^{-15}$. Our fairly conservative fiducial model predicts an amplitude of $A_{\textrm{yr}^{-1}} \approx 0.4\times 10^{-15}$---less than a factor of three below the current limit. At lower frequencies, we find $A_{0.1\,\textrm{yr}^{-1}} \approx 1.5\times 10^{-15}$ with spectral indices between $-0.4$ and $-0.6$---significantly flatter than the canonical value of $-2/3$ due to purely GW-driven evolution. Typical MBHB driving the GWB signal come from redshifts around $0.3$, with total masses of a few times $10^9\,M_\odot$, and in host galaxies with very large stellar masses. Even without GWB detections, our results can be connected to observations of dual AGN to constrain binary evolution.
Submission history
From: Luke Zoltan Kelley [view email][v1] Mon, 6 Jun 2016 20:00:03 UTC (1,427 KB)
[v2] Wed, 5 Oct 2016 17:58:23 UTC (1,429 KB)
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