arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:1710.04658 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

The influence of Massive Black Hole Binaries on the Morphology of Merger Remnants

Elisa Bortolas, Alessia Gualandris, Massimo Dotti, Justin I. Read

Published 2017-10-12Version 1

Massive black hole (MBH) binaries, formed as a result of galaxy mergers, are expected to harden by dynamical friction and three body stellar scatterings, until emission of gravitational waves (GWs) leads to their final coalescence. According to recent simulations, MBH binaries can efficiently harden via stellar encounters only when the host geometry is triaxial, even if only modestly, as angular momentum diffusion allows an efficient repopulation of the binary loss cone. In this paper, we carry out a suite of N-body simulations of equal-mass galaxy collisions, varying the initial orbits and density profiles for the merging galaxies and running simulations both with and without central MBHs. We find that the presence of a MBH binary in the remnant makes the system maximally triaxial within the binary sphere of influence and nearly oblate, aligned with the galaxy merger plane, within a radius enclosing 100 MBH masses. We never find binary hosts to be prolate on any scale. The decaying MBHs slightly enhance the tangential anisotropy in the centre of the remnant due to angular momentum injection and the slingshot ejection of stars on nearly radial orbits. This latter effect results in about 1% of the remnant stars being expelled from the galactic nucleus. Finally, we do not find any strong connection between the remnant morphology and the binary hardening rate, which depends only on the inner density slope of the remnant galaxy. Our results suggest that MBH binaries are able to coalesce within a few Gyr, even if their host systems retain an axisymmetric shape beyond the binary sphere of influence.

Comments: 16 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables; submitted to MNRAS, comments are welcome
Categories: astro-ph.GA
Subjects: 85A05
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:1509.00158 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2015-09-01)
Boosted Tidal Disruption by Massive Black Hole Binaries During Galaxy Mergers - In The View of N-Body Simulation
arXiv:1707.08806 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2017-07-27)
Morphology of Seyfert Galaxies
arXiv:1909.00027 [astro-ph.GA] (Published 2019-08-30)
The z=7.54 Quasar ULAS J1342+0928 Is Hosted by a Galaxy Merger