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Eccentric Mergers of Intermediate-Mass Black Holes from Evection Resonances in AGN Disks (2204.06002v1)

Published 12 Apr 2022 in astro-ph.HE and gr-qc

Abstract: We apply the theory of nonlinear resonance capture to the problem of a black hole binary (BHB) orbiting a supermassive black hole (SMBH) while embedded in the accretion disk of an active galactic nucleus (AGN). If successful, resonance capture can trigger dramatic growth in the BHB eccentricity, with important consequences for the BHB merger timescale, as well as for the gravitational wave (GW) signature of such an eccentric merger. This resonance capture may occur when the orbital period around the SMBH (the "outer binary") and the apsidal precession of the BHB (the "inner binary") are in a 1:1 commensurability. This effect is analogous to the phenomenon of lunar evection resonance in the early Sun-Earth-Moon system, with the distinction that in the present case, the BHB apsidal precession is due to general relativity, rather than rotationally-induced distortion. In contrast to the case of lunar evection, however, the inner binary undergoes orbital decay driven by GW emission, rather than orbital expansion driven by tidal dissipation. This distinction fundamentally alters the three-body dynamics, forbidding resonance capture, and limiting eccentricity growth. However, if the BHB migrates through of a gaseous AGN disk, the change in the outer binary can counterbalance the suppressing effect of BHB decay, permitting evection resonance capture and the production of eccentric BHB mergers. We compute the likelihood of resonance capture assuming an agnostic distribution of parameters for the three bodies involved and for the properties of the AGN disk. We find that intermediate-mass ratio BHBs (involving an intermediate-mass black hole and a stellar-mass black hole) are the most likely to be captured into evection resonance and thus undergo an eccentric merger. We also compute the GW signature of these mergers, showing that they can enter the LISA band while eccentric.

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