46 research outputs found
Tidal Disruption of White Dwarfs from Ultra-close Encounters with Intermediate-mass Spinning Black Holes
We present numerical relativity results of tidal disruptions of white dwarfs from ultra-close encounters with a spinning, intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH). These encounters require a full general relativistic treatment of gravity. We show that the disruption process and prompt accretion of the debris strongly depend on the magnitude and orientation of the black hole (BH) spin. However, the late-time accretion onto the BH follows the same decay, áč â t^(-5/3), estimated from Newtonian gravity disruption studies. We compute the spectrum of the disk formed from the fallback material using a slim disk model. The disk spectrum peaks in the soft X-rays and sustains Eddington luminosity for 1-3 yr after the disruption. For arbitrary BH spin orientations, the disrupted material is scattered away from the orbital plane by relativistic frame dragging, which often leads to obscuration of the inner fallback disk by the outflowing debris. The disruption events also yield bursts of gravitational radiation with characteristic frequencies of ~3.2 Hz and strain amplitudes of ~10^(â18) for galactic IMBHs. The optimistic rate of considered ultra-close disruptions is consistent with no sources found in the ROSAT all-sky survey. Future missions like Wide-Field X-ray Telescope could observe dozens of events
Robustness of Binary Black Hole Mergers in the Presence of Spurious Radiation
We present an investigation into how sensitive the last orbits and merger of
binary black hole systems are to the presence of spurious radiation in the
initial data. Our numerical experiments consist of a binary black hole system
starting the last couple of orbits before merger with additional spurious
radiation centered at the origin and fixed initial angular momentum. As the
energy in the added spurious radiation increases, the binary is invariably
hardened for the cases we tested, i.e. the merger of the two black holes is
hastened. The change in merger time becomes significant when the additional
energy provided by the spurious radiation increases the Arnowitt-Deser-Misner
(ADM) mass of the spacetime by about 1%. While the final masses of the black
holes increase due to partial absorption of the radiation, the final spins
remain constant to within our numerical accuracy. We conjecture that the
spurious radiation is primarily increasing the eccentricity of the orbit and
secondarily increasing the mass of the black holes while propagating out to
infinity.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
GRB060218 as a Tidal Disruption of a White Dwarf by an Intermediate Mass Black Hole
A highly unusual pair of a gamma-ray burst (GRB) GRB060218 and an associated
supernova SN2006aj has puzzled theorists for years. A supernova shock breakout
and a jet from a newborn stellar mass compact object were put forward to
explain its multiwavelength signature. We propose that the source is naturally
explained by another channel, a tidal disruption of a white dwarf (WD) by an
intermediate mass black hole (IMBH). The tidal disruption is accompanied by a
tidal pinching, which leads to the ignition of a WD and a supernova. Some
debris falls back onto the IMBH, forms a disk, which quickly amplifies the
magnetic field, and launches a jet. We successfully fit soft X-ray spectrum
with the Comptonized blackbody emission from a jet photosphere. The optical/UV
emission is consistent with self-absorbed synchrotron from the expanding jet
front. The accretion rate temporal dependence Mdot(t) in a tidal disruption
provides a good fit to soft X-ray lightcurve. The IMBH mass is found to be
about 10^4Msun in three independent estimates: (1) fitting tidal disruption
Mdot(t) to soft X-ray lightcurve; (2) computing the jet base radius in a jet
photospheric emission model; (3) inferring the central BH mass based on a host
dwarf galaxy stellar mass. The supernova position is consistent with the center
of the host galaxy, while low supernova ejecta mass is consistent with a WD
mass. High expected rate of tidal disruptions in dwarf galaxies is consistent
with one source observed by Swift satellite over several years at GRB060218
distance of 150Mpc. The encounters with the WDs provide a lot of fuel for IMBH
growth.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted to ApJ, minor change
Super-Extremal Spinning Black Holes via Accretion
A Kerr black hole with mass and angular momentum satisfies the
extremality inequality . In the presence of matter and/or
gravitational radiation, this bound needs to be reformulated in terms of local
measurements of the mass and the angular momentum directly associated with the
black hole. The isolated and dynamical horizon framework provides such
quasi-local characterization of black hole mass and angular momentum. With this
framework, it is possible in axisymmetry to reformulate the extremality limit
as , with the irreducible mass of the black hole
computed from its apparent horizon area and obtained using approximate
rotational Killing vectors on the apparent horizon. The
condition is also equivalent to requiring a non-negative black hole surface
gravity. We present numerical experiments of an accreting black hole that
temporarily violates this extremality inequality. The initial configuration
consists of a single, rotating black hole surrounded by a thick, shell cloud of
negative energy density. For these numerical experiments, we introduce a new
matter-without-matter evolution method.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Mergers of Supermassive Black Holes in Astrophysical Environments
Modeling the late inspiral and merger of supermassive black holes is central
to understanding accretion processes and the conditions under which
electromagnetic emission accompanies gravitational waves. We use fully general
relativistic, hydrodynamics simulations to investigate how electromagnetic
signatures correlate with black hole spins, mass ratios, and the gaseous
environment in this final phase of binary evolution. In all scenarios, we find
some form of characteristic electromagnetic variability whose pattern depends
on the spins and binary mass ratios. Binaries in hot accretion flows exhibit a
flare followed by a sudden drop in luminosity associated with the plunge and
merger, as well as quasi-periodic oscillations correlated with the
gravitational waves during the inspiral. Conversely, circumbinary disk systems
are characterized by a low luminosity of variable emission, suggesting
challenging prospects for their detection.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, replaced with version accepted for
publication in Ap
Relativistic Mergers of Supermassive Black Holes and their Electromagnetic Signatures
Coincident detections of electromagnetic (EM) and gravitational wave (GW)
signatures from coalescence events of supermassive black holes are the next
observational grand challenge. Such detections will provide the means to study
cosmological evolution and accretion processes associated with these gargantuan
compact objects. More generally, the observations will enable testing general
relativity in the strong, nonlinear regime and will provide independent
cosmological measurements to high precision. Understanding the conditions under
which coincidences of EM and GW signatures arise during supermassive black hole
mergers is therefore of paramount importance. As an essential step towards this
goal, we present results from the first fully general relativistic,
hydrodynamical study of the late inspiral and merger of equal-mass, spinning
supermassive black hole binaries in a gas cloud. We find that variable EM
signatures correlated with GWs can arise in merging systems as a consequence of
shocks and accretion combined with the effect of relativistic beaming. The most
striking EM variability is observed for systems where spins are aligned with
the orbital axis and where orbiting black holes form a stable set of density
wakes, but all systems exhibit some characteristic signatures that can be
utilized in searches for EM counterparts. In the case of the most massive
binaries observable by the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, calculated
luminosities imply that they may be identified by EM searches to z = 1, while
lower mass systems and binaries immersed in low density ambient gas can only be
detected in the local universe.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, version accepted for publicatio
Properties of Accretion Flows Around Coalescing Supermassive Black Holes
What are the properties of accretion flows in the vicinity of coalescing
supermassive black holes (SBHs)? The answer to this question has direct
implications for the feasibility of coincident detections of electromagnetic
(EM) and gravitational wave (GW) signals from coalescences. Such detections are
considered to be the next observational grand challenge that will enable
testing general relativity in the strong, nonlinear regime and improve our
understanding of evolution and growth of these massive compact objects. In this
paper we review the properties of the environment of coalescing binaries in the
context of the circumbinary disk and hot, radiatively inefficient accretion
flow models and use them to mark the extent of the parameter space spanned by
this problem. We report the results from an ongoing, general relativistic,
hydrodynamical study of the inspiral and merger of black holes, motivated by
the latter scenario. We find that correlated EM+GW oscillations can arise
during the inspiral phase followed by the gradual rise and subsequent drop-off
in the light curve at the time of coalescence. While there are indications that
the latter EM signature is a more robust one, a detection of either signal
coincidentally with GWs would be a convincing evidence for an impending SBH
binary coalescence. The observability of an EM counterpart in the hot accretion
flow scenario depends on the details of a model. In the case of the most
massive binaries observable by the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, upper
limits on luminosity imply that they may be identified by EM searches out to
z~0.1-1. However, given the radiatively inefficient nature of the gas flow, we
speculate that a majority of massive binaries may appear as low luminosity AGN
in the local universe.Comment: Revised version accepted to Class. Quantum Grav. for proceedings of
8th LISA Symposium. 15 pages, 3 figures, includes changes suggested in
referee report
GRHydro: a new open-source general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamics code for the Einstein toolkit
We present the new general-relativistic magnetohydrodynamics (GRMHD) capabilities of the Einstein toolkit, an open-source community-driven numerical relativity and computational relativistic astrophysics code. The GRMHD extension of the toolkit builds upon previous releases and implements the evolution of relativistic magnetized fluids in the ideal MHD limit in fully dynamical spacetimes using the same shock-capturing techniques previously applied to hydrodynamical evolution. In order to maintain the divergence-free character of the magnetic field, the code implements both constrained transport and hyperbolic divergence cleaning schemes. We present test results for a number of MHD tests in Minkowski and curved spacetimes. Minkowski tests include aligned and oblique planar shocks, cylindrical explosions, magnetic rotors, Alfvén waves and advected loops, as well as a set of tests designed to study the response of the divergence cleaning scheme to numerically generated monopoles. We study the code's performance in curved spacetimes with spherical accretion onto a black hole on a fixed background spacetime and in fully dynamical spacetimes by evolutions of a magnetized polytropic neutron star and of the collapse of a magnetized stellar core. Our results agree well with exact solutions where these are available and we demonstrate convergence. All code and input files used to generate the results are available on http://einsteintoolkit.org. This makes our work fully reproducible and provides new users with an introduction to applications of the code
Binary black hole evolutions of approximate puncture initial data
Approximate solutions to the Einstein field equations are a valuable tool to
investigate gravitational phenomena. An important aspect of any approximation
is to investigate and quantify its regime of validity. We present a study that
evaluates the effects that approximate puncture initial data, based on
"skeleton" solutions to the Einstein constraints as proposed by Faye et al.
[PRD 69, 124029 (2004)], have on numerical evolutions. Using data analysis
tools, we assess the effectiveness of these constraint-violating initial data
and show that the matches of waveforms from skeleton data with the
corresponding waveforms from constraint-satisfying initial data are > 0.97 when
the total mass of the binary is > 40M(solar). In addition, we demonstrate that
the differences between the skeleton and the constraint-satisfying initial data
evolutions, and thus waveforms, are due to negative Hamiltonian constraint
violations present in the skeleton initial data located in the vicinity of the
punctures. During the evolution, the skeleton data develops both Hamiltonian
and momentum constraint violations that decay with time, with the binary system
relaxing to a constraint-satisfying solution with black holes of smaller mass
and thus different dynamics
Late Inspiral and Merger of Binary Black Holes in Scalar-Tensor Theories of Gravity
Gravitational wave observations will probe non-linear gravitational
interactions and thus enable strong tests of Einstein's theory of general
relativity. We present a numerical relativity study of the late inspiral and
merger of binary black holes in scalar-tensor theories of gravity. We consider
black hole binaries in an inhomogeneous scalar field, specifically binaries
inside a scalar field bubble, in some cases with a potential. We calculate the
emission of dipole radiation. We also show how these configurations trigger
detectable differences between gravitational waves in scalar-tensor gravity and
the corresponding waves in general relativity. We conclude that, barring an
external mechanism to induce dynamics in the scalar field, scalar-tensor
gravity binary black holes alone are not capable of awaking a dormant scalar
field, and are thus observationally indistinguishable from their general
relativistic counterparts.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl