How to Escape from a Trap: Outcomes of Repeated Black Hole Mergers in AGN
Shmuel Gilbaum, Evgeni Grishin, Nicholas C. Stone, Ilya Mandel

TL;DR
This paper explores how black holes in active galactic nuclei can escape migration traps through mergers, affecting hierarchical growth and gravitational wave sources, with implications for LIGO and LISA observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that gap opening at a critical mass allows black holes to escape migration traps, influencing the population of merging black holes in AGN disks.
Findings
GW recoil kicks realign black holes into the disk.
Gap opening prevents hierarchical growth in certain AGN.
Migration traps exist only in a narrow luminosity range.
Abstract
Stellar-mass black holes (BHs) embedded in active galactic nuclei (AGN) may be major sources of astrophysical gravitational waves (GWs), contributing both to the observed LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA population of binary BH mergers and to future populations of LISA-band extreme mass ratio inspirals (EMRIs). The ability of these BHs to pair up into binaries, inspiral, and produce GWs will be shaped by the existence of migration traps, regions in the AGN where hydrodynamic torques vanish. Previous works have studied the existence and location of migration traps in AGN disks. Here, we investigate how individual BHs may escape such traps as an outcome of mergers, potentially suppressing hierarchical growth. We find that while GW recoil kicks are strong enough to kick merged BHs onto inclined orbits, gas drag quickly realigns them into the AGN disk. A more robust escape mechanism is gap opening: once a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCorporate Governance and Law · Private Equity and Venture Capital · Banking stability, regulation, efficiency
