Eccentric Black Hole Mergers in Active Galactic Nuclei
Abstract
The astrophysical origin of gravitational wave (GW) transients is a timely open question in the wake of discoveries by LIGO/Virgo. In active galactic nuclei (AGNs), binaries form and evolve efficiently by interaction with a dense population of stars and the gaseous AGN disk. Previous studies have shown that stellar-mass black hole (BH) mergers in such environments can explain the merger rate and the number of suspected hierarchical mergers observed by LIGO/Virgo. The binary eccentricity distribution can provide further information to distinguish between astrophysical models. Here we derive the eccentricity distribution of BH mergers in AGN disks. We find that eccentricity is mainly due to binary-single (BS) interactions, which lead to most BH mergers in AGN disks having a significant eccentricity at 0.01\,Hz, detectable by LISA. If BS interactions occur in isotropic-3D directions, then 8--30\% of the mergers in AGN disks will have eccentricities at 10\,Hz above e10\, Hz 0.03, detectable by LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA, while 5--17\% of mergers have e10\, Hz≥ 0.3. On the other hand, if BS interactions are confined to the AGN-disk plane due to torques from the disk, with 1-20 intermediate binary states during each interaction, or if BHs can migrate to 10-3\,pc from the central supermassive black hole, then 10--70\% of the mergers will be highly eccentric (e10\, Hz ≥ 0.3), consistent with the possible high eccentricity in GW190521.
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