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Phys. Rev. D 80, 024012 (2009) [12 pages]

Perturbed disks get shocked: Binary black hole merger effects on accretion disks

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Miguel Megevand1, Matthew Anderson2, Juhan Frank1, Eric W. Hirschmann3, Luis Lehner1, Steven L. Liebling4, Patrick M. Motl5, and David Neilsen3
1Department of Physics and Astronomy, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803-4001, USA
2Department of Mathematics, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602, USA
3Department of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah 84602, USA
4Department of Physics, Long Island University–C.W. Post Campus, Brookville, New York 11548, USA
5Department of Natural, Information and Mathematical Sciences, Indiana University Kokomo, Kokomo, Indiana 46904, USA

Received 22 May 2009; published 14 July 2009

The merger process of a binary black hole system can have a strong impact on a circumbinary disk. In the present work we study the effect of both central mass reduction (due to the energy loss through gravitational waves) and a possible black hole recoil (due to asymmetric emission of gravitational radiation). For the mass reduction case and recoil directed along the disk’s angular momentum, oscillations are induced in the disk which then modulate the internal energy and bremsstrahlung luminosities. On the other hand, when the recoil direction has a component orthogonal to the disk’s angular momentum, the disk’s dynamics are strongly impacted, giving rise to relativistic shocks. The shock heating leaves its signature in our proxies for radiation, the total internal energy and bremsstrahlung luminosity. Interestingly, for cases where the kick velocity is below the smallest orbital velocity in the disk (a likely scenario in real active galactic nuclei), we observe a common, characteristic pattern in the internal energy of the disk. Variations in kick velocity simply provide a phase offset in the characteristic pattern implying that observations of such a signature could yield a measure of the kick velocity through electromagnetic signals alone.

© 2009 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.80.024012
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.80.024012
PACS:
04.25.D−, 04.25.dk, 04.30.Db, 95.85.Sz

See Also

See Also: Matthew Anderson, Luis Lehner, Miguel Megevand, and David Neilsen, Post-merger electromagnetic emissions from disks perturbed by binary black holes, Phys. Rev. D 81, 044004 (2010).