Wandering and escaping: recoiling massive black holes in cosmological simulations
Chi An Dong-P\'aez, Marta Volonteri, Yohan Dubois, Ricarda S., Beckmann, Maxime Trebitsch

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to analyze how gravitational wave recoil from black hole mergers influences black hole growth, galaxy correlations, and the population of wandering black holes.
Contribution
First to incorporate spin-dependent gravitational wave recoil in cosmological simulations, revealing its significant impact on black hole and galaxy evolution.
Findings
GW recoil reduces black hole growth post-merger
Recoil can cause black holes to escape galaxy centers
Recoiling black holes form a substantial wandering population
Abstract
After a merger of two massive black holes (MBHs), the remnant receives a gravitational wave (GW) recoil kick that can have a strong effect on its future evolution. The magnitude of the kick () depends on the mass ratio and the alignment of the spins and orbital angular momenta, therefore on the previous evolution of the MBHs. We investigate the cosmic effect of GW recoil by running for the first time a high-resolution cosmological simulation including GW recoil that depends on the MBH spins (evolved through accretion and mergers), masses and dynamics computed self-consistently. We also run a twin simulation without GW recoil. The simulations are run down to . We find that GW recoil reduces the growth of merger remnants, and can have a significant effect on the MBH-galaxy correlations and the merger rate. We find large recoil kicks across all galaxy masses in…
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