Eccentric Mergers of Intermediate-Mass Black Holes from Evection Resonances in AGN Disks
Diego J. Mu\~noz, Nicholas C. Stone, Cristobal Petrovich, Frederic, A. Rasio

TL;DR
This paper investigates how intermediate-mass black hole binaries in AGN disks can undergo resonance capture leading to eccentric mergers, affecting gravitational wave signals detectable by LISA.
Contribution
It introduces a model for resonance capture in BHBs within AGN disks, highlighting conditions for eccentric mergers and their GW signatures, extending lunar evection resonance theory.
Findings
Intermediate-mass ratio BHBs are most likely to undergo resonance capture.
Resonance capture can produce eccentric mergers detectable by LISA.
Eccentric mergers significantly influence gravitational wave signatures.
Abstract
We apply the theory of nonlinear resonance capture to the problem of a black hole binary (BHB) orbiting a supermassive black hole (SMBH) while embedded in the accretion disk of an active galactic nucleus (AGN). If successful, resonance capture can trigger dramatic growth in the BHB eccentricity, with important consequences for the BHB merger timescale, as well as for the gravitational wave (GW) signature of such an eccentric merger. This resonance capture may occur when the orbital period around the SMBH (the "outer binary") and the apsidal precession of the BHB (the "inner binary") are in a 1:1 commensurability. This effect is analogous to the phenomenon of lunar evection resonance in the early Sun-Earth-Moon system, with the distinction that in the present case, the BHB apsidal precession is due to general relativity, rather than rotationally-induced distortion. In contrast to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
