Growing Massive Black Hole Pairs in Minor Mergers of Disk Galaxies
S. Callegari, S. Kazantzidis, L. Mayer, M. Colpi, J. M. Bellovary, T., Quinn, J. Wadsley

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to explore how minor galaxy mergers influence the orbital decay and mass evolution of massive black hole pairs, revealing complex interactions that affect their eventual mass ratios and merger timescales.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the evolution of MBH pairs during minor mergers, highlighting the impact of gas dynamics and tidal effects on mass ratios and inspiral efficiency.
Findings
MBH mass ratios can change significantly during minor mergers.
Orbital decay efficiency correlates with the final MBH mass ratio.
Mass ratios do not necessarily reflect host galaxy mass ratios.
Abstract
We perform a suite of high-resolution smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulations to investigate the orbital decay and mass evolution of massive black hole (MBH) pairs down to scales of ~30 pc during minor mergers of disk galaxies. Our simulation set includes star formation and accretion onto the MBHs, as well as feedback from both processes. We consider 1:10 merger events starting at z~3, with MBH masses in the sensitivity window of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, and we follow the coupling between the merger dynamics and the evolution of the MBH mass ratio until the satellite galaxy is tidally disrupted. While the more massive MBH accretes in most cases as if the galaxy were in isolation, the satellite MBH may undergo distinct episodes of enhanced accretion, owing to strong tidal torques acting on its host galaxy and to orbital circularization inside the disk of the primary…
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