Double-double radio galaxies: remnants of merger of supermassive binary black holes
Abstract
The activity of active galaxy may be triggered by the merge of galaxies and present-day galaxies are probably the product of successive minor mergers. The frequent galactic merges at high redshift imply that active galaxy harbors supermassive unequal-mass binary black holes in its center at least once during its life time. In this paper, we showed that the recently discovered double-lobed FR II radio galaxies are the remnants of such supermassive binary black holes. The inspiraling secondary black hole opens a gap in the accretion disk and removes the inner accretion disk when it merges into the primary black hole, leaving a big hole of about several hundreds of Schwarzschild radius in the vicinity of the post-merged supermassive black hole and leading to an interruption of jet formation. When the outer accretion disk slowly refills the big hole on a viscous time scale, the jet formation restarts and the interaction of the recurrent jets and the inter-galactic medium forms a secondary pair of lobes. We applied the model to a particular double-lobed radio source B1834+620 and showed that the orbit of the secondary is elliptical with a typical eccentricity e 0.68 and the mass ratio q of the secondary and the primary is 0.01 q 0.4. The accretion disk is a standard α-disk with 0.01 α 0.04 and the ratio of disk half height H and radius r is δ 0.01. The model predicates that double-lobed radio structure forms only in FR II radio galaxies.
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