Connecting current and future dual AGN searches to LISA and PTA gravitational wave detections
Nianyi Chen, Yihao Zhou, Ekaterine Dadiani, Tiziana Di Matteo, Cici Wang, Antonella Palmese, Yue Shen, Junyao Li, Adi Foord, Simeon Bird, Yueying Ni, Yanhui Yang, and Rupert Croft

TL;DR
This paper uses cosmological simulations to connect dual active galactic nuclei with future gravitational wave detections, revealing hidden populations and key environments for massive black hole mergers.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive framework linking dual AGN demographics, black hole mergers, and gravitational wave signals, with predictions for upcoming multi-messenger surveys.
Findings
Current surveys miss many small-separation duals due to selection effects.
30-70% of dual AGN coalesce within 1 Gyr, producing detectable gravitational waves.
Duals in certain galaxy types are primary sources for upcoming gravitational wave detectors.
Abstract
Dual active galactic nuclei (DAGN) mark an observable stage of massive black hole (MBH) pairing in galaxy mergers and are precursors to the MBH binaries that generate low-frequency gravitational waves. Using the large-volume ASTRID cosmological simulation, we construct DAGN catalogs matched to current (COSMOS-Web, DESI) and forthcoming (AXIS, Roman) searches. With realistic selection functions applied, ASTRID reproduces observed dual fractions, separations, and host-galaxy properties across redshifts. We predict a substantial population of small-separation (<5 kpc) duals that current surveys fail to capture, indicating that the apparent paucity of sub-kpc systems in COSMOS-Web is driven primarily by selection effects rather than a physical deficit. By following each simulated dual forward in time, we show that dual AGN are robust tracers of MBH mergers: ~30-70% coalesce within $\lesssim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
