Reviving stochasticity: uncertainty in SMBH binary eccentricity is unavoidable
Alexander Rawlings, Matias Mannerkoski, Peter H. Johansson, Thorsten, Naab

TL;DR
This study uses advanced N-body simulations to demonstrate that supermassive black hole binary eccentricity is inherently unpredictable due to complex dynamical interactions, with implications for understanding galaxy mergers.
Contribution
It reveals a non-linear, resolution-independent relationship between SMBH orbit deflection and binary eccentricity, highlighting the role of stellar potential and dynamical friction in eccentricity variability.
Findings
Eccentricity varies widely due to orbit deflections.
Resolution does not significantly affect the eccentricity mapping.
Real galaxies likely exhibit effectively random SMBH binary eccentricities.
Abstract
We study supermassive black hole (SMBH) binary eccentricity of equal-mass galaxy mergers in -body simulations with the KETJU code, which combines the GAGDET-4 fast multipole gravity solver with accurate regularised integration and post-Newtonian corrections around SMBHs. In simulations with realistic, high eccentricity galactic merger orbits, the hard binary eccentricity is found to be a non-linear function of the deflection angle in the SMBH orbit during the final, nearly radial close encounter between the SMBHs before they form a bound binary. This mapping between the deflection angle and the binary eccentricity has no apparent resolution dependence in our simulations spanning the resolution range of - particles per galaxy. The mapping is also captured using a simple model with an analytic potential, indicating that it is driven by the interplay between a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
