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The Gravitational and Electromagnetic Signatures of Black Hole Mergers

Zoltan Haiman (Columbia University) // October 29, 2020


Abstract: Supermassive black hole (SMBH) binaries are the primary targets of low-frequency gravitational wave (GW) experiments from space and from the ground. They are expected to be produced during collisions between galaxies carrying their own nuclear SMBHs. I will argue that compact, gravitationally bound SMBH binaries should often be surrounded by plasma and produce bright electromagnetic (EM) emission. Hydrodynamical simulations of BH binaries with circumbinary accretion disks have revealed that the BHs can be fuelled efficiently, with the fuelling rates quasi-periodically modulated all the way to the BH merger. The corresponding EM emission is time-variable, with a periodicity pattern depending on the mass ratio of the BHs, and will contain unique spectral signatures. A post-merger afterglow is also expected, following the burst of GWs which drive shocks through the circumbinary plasma. These effects may be used to identify unique EM counterparts of the GW sources expected to be discovered by Pulsar Timing Arrays (PTAs) and by the space interferometer LISA, and to discover wider binary SMBHs in time-domain EM surveys. The simultaneous EM and GW detections of SMBH binaries will enable a range of new science, from accretion physics to novel tests of gravity and dark energy. In principle, many of the above conclusions could also hold for stellar-mass BH binaries. Time permitting, I will comment on the possibility that some of the BH mergers recently discovered by LIGO/Virgo may have occurred in a plasma-rich enviroment of a galactic nucleus, and possible unique signatures of this
scenario.

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