Secular evolution of compact binaries near massive black holes: gravitational wave sources and other exotica
Fabio Antonini, Hagai Perets

TL;DR
This paper studies how the environment near supermassive black holes influences the evolution of compact binaries, leading to unique gravitational wave sources and potentially affecting their detectability and properties.
Contribution
It introduces the secular evolution mechanisms of binaries near SMBHs, highlighting their impact on gravitational wave emission and the formation of exotic binary systems.
Findings
Binaries can inspiral and merge faster near SMBHs due to Kozai cycles.
Approximately 0.5% of merging binaries will be detectable by LIGO with high eccentricity.
Close binaries near SMBHs can produce multiple GW pulses in short timescales.
Abstract
The environment near super massive black holes (SMBHs) in galactic nuclei contain a large number of stars and compact objects. A fraction of these are likely to be members of binaries. Here we discuss the binary population of stellar black holes and neutron stars near SMBHs and focus on the secular evolution of such binaries, due to the perturbation by the SMBH. Binaries with highly inclined orbits in respect to their orbit around the SMBH are strongly affected by secular Kozai processes, which periodically change their eccentricities and inclinations (Kozai-cycles). During periapsis approach, at the highest eccentricities during the Kozai-cycles, gravitational wave emission becomes highly efficient. Some binaries in this environment can inspiral and coalesce at timescales much shorter than a Hubble time and much shorter than similar binaries which do not reside near a SMBH. The close…
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