Formation and Hardening of Supermassive Black Hole Binaries in Minor Mergers of Disk Galaxies
Fazeel Mahmood Khan, Ingo Berentzen, Peter Berczik, Andreas Just,, Lucio Mayer, Keigo Nitadori, Simone Callegari

TL;DR
This study models the complete orbital evolution of supermassive black hole binaries in minor galaxy mergers, from initial pairing to gravitational wave emission, revealing rapid binary hardening and potential for detection by future gravitational wave observatories.
Contribution
First comprehensive simulation of SMBH binary formation and evolution in 1:10 galaxy mergers, combining hydrodynamics and N-body techniques to track from initial pairing to gravitational wave emission.
Findings
Binary hardening rates are approximately constant.
High eccentricity develops rapidly in SMBH binaries.
Estimated coalescence time is about 2.9 billion years.
Abstract
We model for the first time the complete orbital evolution of a pair of Supermassive Black Holes (SMBHs) in a 1:10 galaxy merger of two disk dominated gas-rich galaxies, from the stage prior to the formation of the binary up to the onset of gravitational wave emission when the binary separation has shrunk to 1 milli parsec. The high-resolution smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations used for the first phase of the evolution include star formation, accretion onto the SMBHs as well as feedback from supernovae explosions and radiative heating from the SMBHs themselves. Using the direct N-body code \phi-GPU we evolve the system further without including the effect of gas, which has been mostly consumed by star formation in the meantime. We start at the time when the separation between two SMBHs is ~ 700 pc and the two black holes are still embedded in their galaxy cusps. We use 3…
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