Recoiling Massive Black Holes in Gas-Rich Galaxy Mergers
Javiera Guedes, Piero Madau, Lucio Mayer, and Simone Callegari

TL;DR
This study investigates the trajectories and observability of recoiling massive black holes in gas-rich galaxy mergers, revealing that high-velocity recoils are confined or long-lived depending on merger type, but are generally rare to observe.
Contribution
The paper provides new simulations and a semi-analytical model for MBH recoil dynamics in gas-rich mergers, highlighting the impact of gas and potential observability.
Findings
High-velocity recoils are confined within 1 kpc in major mergers.
Observable offset nuclei last for a few million years at certain velocities.
The probability of observing recoiling MBHs is extremely low, below 10^-5.
Abstract
The asymmetric emission of gravitational waves produced during the coalescence of a massive black hole (MBH) binary imparts a velocity "kick" to the system that can displace the hole from the center of its host. Here we study the trajectories and observability of MBHs recoiling in three (one major, two minor) gas-rich galaxy merger remnants that were previously simulated at high resolution, and in which the pairing of the MBHs had been shown to be successful. We run new simulations of MBHs recoiling in the major merger remnant with Mach numbers in the range 1<M<6, and use simulation data to construct a semi-analytical model for the orbital evolution of MBHs in gas-rich systems. We show that: 1) in major merger remnants the energy deposited by the moving hole into the rotationally supported, turbulent medium makes a negligible contribution to the thermodynamics of the gas. This…
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