Monte-Carlo simulations of black hole mergers in AGN disks: Low eff mergers and predictions for LIGO
Abstract
Accretion disks around supermassive black holes are promising sites for stellar mass black hole mergers detectable with LIGO. Here we present the results of Monte-Carlo simulations of black hole mergers within 1-d AGN disk models. For the spin distribution in the disk bulk, key findings are: (1) The distribution of eff is naturally centered around eff ≈ 0.0, (2) the width of the eff distribution is narrow for low natal spins. For the mass distribution in the disk bulk, key findings are: (3) mass ratios q 0.5-0.7, (4) the maximum merger mass in the bulk is 100-200M, (5) 1\% of bulk mergers involve BH >50M with (6) 80\% of bulk mergers are pairs of 1st generation BH. Additionally, mergers at a migration trap grow an IMBH with typical merger mass ratios q 0.1. Ongoing LIGO non-detections of black holes >102M puts strong limits on the presence of migration traps in AGN disks (and therefore AGN disk density and structure) as well as median AGN disk lifetime. The highest merger rate occurs for this channel if AGN disks are relatively short-lived (≤ 1Myr) so multiple AGN episodes can happen per Galactic nucleus in a Hubble time.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.