Massive black hole binaries in LISA: multimessenger prospects and electromagnetic counterparts
A. Mangiagli, C. Caprini, M. Volonteri, S. Marsat, S. Vergani, N., Tamanini, H. Inchausp\'e

TL;DR
This paper assesses the prospects of detecting electromagnetic counterparts to massive black hole binary mergers with LISA and various telescopes, estimating the number, characteristics, and observational challenges of such multimessenger events.
Contribution
It combines astrophysical models and Bayesian analysis to predict the number and properties of detectable EM counterparts to LISA-detected MBHB mergers, including effects of obscuration and emission collimation.
Findings
Between 7 and 21 EM counterparts predicted over 4 years.
Obscuration and collimation reduce detectable EM counterparts to 2-3.
Most EM counterparts are faint, challenging telescope detection.
Abstract
In the next decade, the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) will detect the coalescence of massive black hole binaries (MBHBs) in the range , up to . Their gravitational wave (GW) signal is expected to be accompanied by an electromagnetic counterpart (EMcp), generated by the gas accreting on the binary or on the remnant BH. In this work, we present the number and characteristics (such as redshift and mass distribution, apparent magnitudes or fluxes) of EMcps detectable jointly by LISA and some representative EM telescopes. We combine state-of-the-art astrophysical models for the galaxies formation and evolution to build the MBHBs catalogues, with Bayesian tools to estimate the binary sky position uncertainty from the GW signal. Exploiting additional information from the astrophysical models, such as the amount of accreted gas and the BH…
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