Radial-velocity variation of a tertiary star orbiting a binary black hole in coplanar and non-coplanar triples: short- and long-term anomalous behavior
Toshinori Hayashi, Yasushi Suto

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the radial velocity of a tertiary star in triple systems with a binary black hole can reveal the presence of the inner black hole, through short-term and long-term variations detectable over a decade.
Contribution
It extends previous methods to include noncoplanar triples and analyzes long-term RV variations using N-body simulations and quadrupole theory.
Findings
Pericenter shift indicates hidden inner BBH in coplanar triples.
Periodic modulation of RV semi-amplitude due to precession in noncoplanar triples.
Detectable long-term RV variations within a decade.
Abstract
A number of ongoing surveys are likely to discover star-black hole binaries in our Galaxy in the near future. A fraction of them may be triple systems comprising an inner binary, instead of a single black hole, which might be progenitors of binary black holes (BBHs) routinely discovered now from the gravitational wave. We extend our previous proposal to locate inner BBHs from the short-term radial-velocity (RV) variation of a tertiary star in coplanar triples, and we consider noncoplanar triples and their long-term RV variations as well. Specifically, we assume coplanar and noncoplanar triples with an inner BBH of the total mass , whose outer and inner orbital periods are 80 days and 10 days, respectively. We perform a series of N-body simulations and compare the results with analytic approximate solutions based on quadrupole perturbation theory. For coplanar triples, the…
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