Suppressed "lump" EM signature in radiation pressure dominated accreting massive black hole binaries
Fabiola Cocchiararo, Alessia Franchini, Alessandro Lupi, and Alberto Sesana

TL;DR
This study uses advanced hydrodynamical simulations to show that radiation pressure significantly alters the electromagnetic signatures of massive black hole binaries, affecting their spectral energy distributions, variability, and observable features.
Contribution
It demonstrates that radiation pressure suppresses the formation of the characteristic 'lump' in equal-mass circular binaries and modifies the emission properties, providing new insights into MBHB observability.
Findings
Radiation pressure shifts mini-disc emission from optical to UV frequencies.
It suppresses the 'lump' feature in circular binaries.
Enhanced mini-disc emission increases optical brightness, aiding detection at higher redshifts.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of radiation pressure on electromagnetic signatures of accreting massive black hole binaries (MBHBs) at milli-parsec separations, using 3D hyper-Lagrangian resolution hydrodynamical simulations. We model binaries embedded in a self-gravitating circumbinary disc that evolves following an adiabatic equation of state, including viscous heating and black-body cooling. Focusing on binaries with a total mass of , eccentricities and mass ratios , we find that radiation pressure significantly affects both the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and the light curves (LCs). The emission from the mini-discs shifts from the optical towards UV frequencies and with a peak luminosity orders of magnitude higher, while the circumbinary disc becomes colder and dimmer as a result of its geometrically thinner configuration. Temporal…
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