52 research outputs found
Mass Function of Binary Massive Black Holes in Active Galactic Nuclei
If the activity of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) is predominantly induced by
major galaxy mergers, then a significant fraction of AGNs should harbor binary
massive black holes in their centers. We study the mass function of binary
massive black holes in nearby AGNs based on the observed AGN black-hole mass
function and theory of evolution of binary massive black holes interacting with
a massive circumbinary disk in the framework of coevolution of massive black
holes and their host galaxies. The circumbinary disk is assumed to be steady,
axisymmetric, geometrically thin, self-regulated, self-gravitating but
non-fragmenting with a fraction of Eddington accretion rate, which is typically
one tenth of Eddington value. The timescale of orbital decay is {then}
estimated as ~10^8yr for equal mass black-hole, being independent of the black
hole mass, semi-major axis, and viscosity parameter but dependent on the
black-hole mass ratio, Eddington ratio, and mass-to-energy conversion
efficiency. This makes it possible for any binary massive black holes to merge
within a Hubble time by the binary-disk interaction. We find that (1.8+-0.6%)
for the equal mass ratio and (1.6+-0.4%) for the one-tenth mass ratio of the
total number of nearby AGNs have close binary massive black holes with orbital
period less than ten years in their centers, detectable with on-going highly
sensitive X-ray monitors such as Monitor of All-sky X-ray Image and/or
Swift/Burst Alert Telescope. Assuming that all binary massive black holes have
the equal mass ratio, about 20% of AGNs with black hole masses of
10^{6.5-7}M_sun has the close binaries and thus provides the best chance to
detect them.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ. The draft was
significantly revised. The major differences from the previous version are as
follows: (1)The circumbinary disk is assumed to be a steady, axisymmetric,
geometrically thin, self-gravitating, self-regulated but non-fragmenting.
(2)The stellar scattering process is taken account of in the merging process
of binary black hole
Binary Black Hole Accretion Flows in Merged Galactic Nuclei
We study the accretion flows from the circumbinary disks onto the
supermassive binary black holes in a subparsec scale of the galactic center,
using a smoothed particles hydrodynamics (SPH) code. Simulation models are
presented in four cases of a circular binary with equal and unequal masses, and
of an eccentric binary with equal and unequal masses. We find that the
circumblack-hole disks are formed around each black holes regardless of
simulation parameters. There are two-step mechanisms to cause an accretion flow
from the circumbinary disk onto supermassive binary black holes: First, the
tidally induced elongation of the circumbinary disk triggers mass inflow
towards two closest points on the circumbinary disk from the black holes. Then,
the gas is increasingly accumulated on these two points owing to the
gravitational attraction of black holes. Second, when the gas can pass across
the maximum loci of the effective binary potential, it starts to overflow via
their two points and freely infalls to each black hole. In circular binaries,
the gas continues to be supplied from the circumbinary disk (i.e. the gap
between the circumbinary disk and the binary black hole is always closed.) In
eccentric binaries, the mass supply undergoes the periodic on/off transitions
during one orbital period because of the variation of periodic potential. The
gap starts to close after the apastron and to open again after the next
periastron passage. Due to this gap closing/opening cycles, the mass-capture
rates are eventually strongly phase dependent. This could provide observable
diagnosis for the presence of supermassive binary black holes in merged
galactic nuclei.Comment: 16 pages, 27 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in PASJ.
"High Resolution Version is Available at
"http://www2.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~kimitake/bbhs.html" Three observational
references are added. Grammatical errors and typos are correcte
Impact of scale-height derivative on general relativistic slim disks in tidal disruption events
We construct a numerical model of steady-state, general relativistic (GR)
super-Eddington accretion flows in an optically thick, advection-dominated
regime, motivated by tidal disruption events wherein super-Eddington accretion
assumes a pivotal role. Our model takes into account the loss of angular
momentum due to radiation and the scale-height derivative in the basic
equations of the GR slim disk. For comparison purposes, we also provide a new
analytical solution for a radiation-pressure-dominant GR slim disk, which
neglects the angular momentum loss due to radiation and the scale-height
derivative. We find that the radiation pressure enhances by incorporating the
scale height derivative into the basic equations. As a result, the surface
density near the disk's inner edge decreases, whereas the disk temperature and
scale height increase, brightening the disk spectrum in the soft X-ray
waveband. Notably, an extremely high mass accretion rate significantly enhances
the effect of the scale-height derivative, affecting the entire disk. In
contrast, the inclusion of the radiation-driven angular momentum loss only
slightly influences the disk surface density and temperature compared with the
case of the scale-height derivative inclusion. The X-ray luminosity increases
significantly due to scale height derivative for . In addition, the increment is higher for the non-spinning black
hole than the spinning black hole case, resulting in a one-order of magnitude
difference for . We conclude that
incorporating the scale-height derivative into a GR slim disk model is crucial
as it impacts the disk structure and its resultant spectrum, particularly on a
soft-X-ray waveband.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Physical
Review
Disk-wind-driven Expanding Radio-emitting Shell in Tidal Disruption Events
We study the evolution of a non-relativistically expanding thin shell in
radio-emitting tidal disruption events (TDEs) based on a one-dimensional
spherically symmetric model considering the effect of both a time-dependent
mass loss rate of the disk wind and the ambient mass distribution. The
analytical solutions are derived in two extreme limits: one is the approximate
solution near the origin in the form of the Taylor series, and the other is the
asymptotic solution in which the ambient matter is dominant far away from the
origin. Our numerical solutions are confirmed to agree with the respective
analytical solutions. We find that no simple power-law of time solution exists
in early to middle times because the mass loss rate varies over time, affecting
the shell dynamics. We also discuss the application of our model to the
observed radio-emitting TDE, AT2019dsg.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
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