Probing gas disc physics with LISA: simulations of an intermediate mass ratio inspiral in an accretion disc
A. Derdzinski, D. D'Orazio, P. Duffell, Z. Haiman, A. MacFadyen

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to show that gas discs around supermassive black holes can cause detectable deviations in gravitational wave signals from inspiraling objects, revealing disc physics through LISA observations.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed hydrodynamical simulations of an intermediate mass ratio inspiral in an AGN disc, showing gas torques slow down the inspiral and affect GW waveforms.
Findings
Gas torques are weaker and opposite in direction to previous models.
Waveform deviations scale linearly with disc mass and are detectable with LISA.
Detectability depends on disc surface density and parameters, probing AGN disc physics.
Abstract
The coalescence of a compact object with a supermassive black hole (SMBH) produces mHz gravitational waves (GWs) detectable by the future Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). If such an inspiral occurs in the accretion disc of an active galactic nucleus (AGN), the gas torques imprint a small deviation in the GW waveform. Here we present two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations with the moving-mesh code DISCO of a BH inspiraling at the GW rate in a binary system with a mass ratio , embedded in an accretion disc. We assume a locally isothermal equation of state for the gas (with Mach number ) and implement a standard -prescription for its viscosity (with ). We find disc torques on the binary that are weaker than in previous semi-analytic toy models, and are in the opposite direction:…
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