Relativistic Suppression of Black Hole Recoils
Michael Kesden, Ulrich Sperhake, Emanuele Berti

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that relativistic spin precession can align black hole spins in binary mergers, significantly reducing recoil velocities and increasing the likelihood of galaxies retaining their supermassive black holes.
Contribution
It introduces a mechanism where relativistic spin precession aligns black hole spins, reducing recoil velocities without requiring gas interactions.
Findings
Relativistic spin precession can align black hole spins on sub-parsec scales.
Aligned spins reduce median recoil velocities from 864 km/s to 273 km/s.
Alignment increases the retention probability of supermassive black holes in galaxies.
Abstract
Numerical-relativity simulations indicate that the black hole produced in a binary merger can recoil with a velocity up to v_max ~ 4,000 km/s with respect to the center of mass of the initial binary. This challenges the paradigm that most galaxies form through hierarchical mergers, yet retain supermassive black holes at their centers despite having escape velocities much less than v_max. Interaction with a circumbinary disk can align the binary black hole spins with their orbital angular momentum, reducing the recoil velocity of the final black hole produced in the subsequent merger. However, the effectiveness of this alignment depends on highly uncertain accretion flows near the binary black holes. In this Letter, we show that if the spin S_1 of the more massive binary black hole is even partially aligned with the orbital angular momentum L, relativistic spin precession on sub-parsec…
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